TheOutsider wrote:
So, I keep hearing about autistic people not understanding figures of speech, but it perplexes me. If someone says, "Never look a gift horse in the mouth", wouldn't everyone need to have that phrase explained to them in order to understand it, particularly if they've never heard it before? Do neurotypical people really understand these types of sayings without explanation?
These types of questions about literal language and not understanding figures of speech show up on many of the online autism tests, so I'm guessing that there's something to it. I just don't know how this could be possible.
Until I came to this site, I didn't even really think about this. Americans use idioms a LOT. SOME people really DON'T understand them at all. A popular phrase is "I couldn't care less"! MANY MANY MANY people apparently don't understand that phrase AT ALL! They say "I could care less"! The meaning of the phrase is that the situation is SO WITHOUT MERIT that you seriously couldn't care ANY less about it! If you COULD care less, it implies that you feel it DID have some merit!
Little kids may even mispronounce words they know well when saying an idiom, because someone that didn't know the idiom made mistakes.