What is the difference between “metaphorically speaking” and “so to speak”?











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Is there any difference between the following two sentences?




  1. "He is a parrot, so to speak."

  2. "He is a parrot, metaphorically speaking."










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  • They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
    – Yosef Baskin
    May 19 '17 at 14:03










  • Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
    – John Lawler
    May 19 '17 at 15:54















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












Is there any difference between the following two sentences?




  1. "He is a parrot, so to speak."

  2. "He is a parrot, metaphorically speaking."










share|improve this question














bumped to the homepage by Community 29 mins ago


This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.















  • They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
    – Yosef Baskin
    May 19 '17 at 14:03










  • Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
    – John Lawler
    May 19 '17 at 15:54













up vote
0
down vote

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up vote
0
down vote

favorite











Is there any difference between the following two sentences?




  1. "He is a parrot, so to speak."

  2. "He is a parrot, metaphorically speaking."










share|improve this question













Is there any difference between the following two sentences?




  1. "He is a parrot, so to speak."

  2. "He is a parrot, metaphorically speaking."







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asked May 19 '17 at 13:57







user20865












bumped to the homepage by Community 29 mins ago


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bumped to the homepage by Community 29 mins ago


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  • They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
    – Yosef Baskin
    May 19 '17 at 14:03










  • Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
    – John Lawler
    May 19 '17 at 15:54


















  • They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
    – Yosef Baskin
    May 19 '17 at 14:03










  • Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
    – John Lawler
    May 19 '17 at 15:54
















They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
– Yosef Baskin
May 19 '17 at 14:03




They are similar, but 'so to speak' is very general. He locked the door in my face, so to speak (when he actually slammed it without locking it). Would you say he locked it metaphorically?
– Yosef Baskin
May 19 '17 at 14:03












Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
– John Lawler
May 19 '17 at 15:54




Sure. Meta-metaphor (which is what this is, unfortunately) is spontaneous, rare, and of no lasting importance -- it just points at the metaphor, which is the important thing.
– John Lawler
May 19 '17 at 15:54










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"So to speak" can imply a more personal expression - refering to a common knowledge. It does not infer that the opinion of the one stating it has considered the meaning in a formal sense; as though it is classified into a group of pre-determined social or grammatical contexts.

"Metaphorically speaking" implys a relation to a group, class of analogies. This could represent a formal level of association in meanings. If I say this I may be infering that I possess the capacity to classify the meaning in a formal sense.






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    "So to speak" can imply a more personal expression - refering to a common knowledge. It does not infer that the opinion of the one stating it has considered the meaning in a formal sense; as though it is classified into a group of pre-determined social or grammatical contexts.

    "Metaphorically speaking" implys a relation to a group, class of analogies. This could represent a formal level of association in meanings. If I say this I may be infering that I possess the capacity to classify the meaning in a formal sense.






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      "So to speak" can imply a more personal expression - refering to a common knowledge. It does not infer that the opinion of the one stating it has considered the meaning in a formal sense; as though it is classified into a group of pre-determined social or grammatical contexts.

      "Metaphorically speaking" implys a relation to a group, class of analogies. This could represent a formal level of association in meanings. If I say this I may be infering that I possess the capacity to classify the meaning in a formal sense.






      share|improve this answer























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        up vote
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        down vote









        "So to speak" can imply a more personal expression - refering to a common knowledge. It does not infer that the opinion of the one stating it has considered the meaning in a formal sense; as though it is classified into a group of pre-determined social or grammatical contexts.

        "Metaphorically speaking" implys a relation to a group, class of analogies. This could represent a formal level of association in meanings. If I say this I may be infering that I possess the capacity to classify the meaning in a formal sense.






        share|improve this answer












        "So to speak" can imply a more personal expression - refering to a common knowledge. It does not infer that the opinion of the one stating it has considered the meaning in a formal sense; as though it is classified into a group of pre-determined social or grammatical contexts.

        "Metaphorically speaking" implys a relation to a group, class of analogies. This could represent a formal level of association in meanings. If I say this I may be infering that I possess the capacity to classify the meaning in a formal sense.







        share|improve this answer












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        answered May 20 '17 at 15:22









        Mints

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