Pay attention to the semantics of the tenor and the vehicle, to the briefer sustained manner of their presentation. It was his habit not to jump or leap at anything in life but to crawl at everything. The grin made his large teeth resemble a dazzling miniature piano keyboard in the green light. He has a tongue like a sward and a pen like a dagger. State which of the comparative structures represent metaphors and similes Going back to the game mechanic, by holding 50% of a de jure area, you can usurp the title, then use that as a Casus belli (another great vocab word: Latin, Casus = cause/incident Belli = War) to engage in the last part of the definition, taking by force. You then must take the title by force via military action. In CK2, the illegal part holds some value as I believe (could be wrong, not an expert like some on this fourm) it does cause a relationship drop. Usurp means to "Take (a position of power or importance) illegally or by force." What this should be thought of is, when you decide to usurp a title, you claim the position even if you hold no legal claim to that title. I don't mean to belittle anyone's vocabulary, but I know when I first started I spent a lot of time online simply trying to learn what all these words mean like, usurp, de jure, etc. I think I'll to talk about what usurping means, as you guys have covered the mechanic well.
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