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Abstract
Metaphors have been widely used in communication about the Covid-19 pandemic. The
virus has been described, for example, as an "enemy" to be "beaten," a "tsunami" on
health services and even as "glitter" that "gets everywhere." This paper discusses
different metaphors for the pandemic, and explains why they are used and why they
matter. War metaphors are considered first, as they were particularly frequent and
controversial at the beginning of the pandemic. An overview of alternative metaphors
is then provided, drawing from the "#ReframeCovid" crowd-sourced multilingual collection
of metaphors for Covid-19. Finally, based on both the #ReframeCovid collection and
a systematic analysis of a large corpus of news articles in English, it is suggested
that Fire metaphors are particularly appropriate and versatile in communication about
different aspects of the pandemic, including contagion and different public health
measures aimed at reducing it.