A growing resource for metaphor examples, essays, lessons and lists.

SEARCH

 

Metaphor

 

Metaphor Examples

Metaphor Resources

Visual Metaphor

Metaphor Videos

Top 10 Metaphors

Metaphor Observatory

 

The Chapters

Introduction

Language of Metaphors

Genetics  of Alphabet Soup

Inherent Programming

The Fractal Chemist

Nanosemaphore

Knowgramming

Pilot's Prose

Metaphor Photos

 

Fun Stuff

Quotes

Games

Crosswords

Free Podcasts

Free Streaming Movies

Free Music/ Movie Sites

Dry Garlic Spare Ribs

 

The Usual

Comments

Contact Us

Privacy Policy

Press Releases

 

 

Bookmark us today!

 

More Alberta Badlands

The Alberta Badlands yeild to the encroaching new life as it embeds itself into the once-barren landscape. We often witness this in the cracks of a sidewalk, our eaves troughs or a deserted parking lot...

Grass and desert growth moves in on the rocky landscape of the Alberta Badlands in Dinosaur Provincial  Park, near Drumheller, Alberta, Canada.

As it is in the world of business - the world of supply and demand  - as more of the suns' energy is captured through the growth of plants, other lifeforms gradually move in to prosper on the bounty, thus enriching the soils' economy further. Soon enough, the present desert will change its environment, just as we have, ensuring a future that is far removed from the present.

 

SOIL TOUR LAST 1 2 3 4 5  NEXT

Photos Home

 

 

 

Free Movies

Free Music

Free Podcasts

About This Site

This website is dedicated to the proposal that the metaphorical relationships drawn between any two disciplines are, in fact, universal, being isomorphic mathematical derivations of the Unified Field Theory. Further, that this symmetric aspect of metaphor is extrapolatable both linearly and laterally, thus may be harnessed to mathematically predict missing knowledge and invention in all other disciplines: an interdisciplinary Rosetta stone of universal scope.

"The metaphor reminds us that the universe is full of cousins." - J.D. Casnig

Copyright John D. Casnig. Permitted use only. Work should be cited as:

Casnig, John D. 1997-2009. A Language of Metaphors. Kingston, Ontario, Canada: Knowgramming.com

About G.G. Falderal

Privacy

Copyright J.D. Casnig

Contact