How about "fell like a leaf made of iron: tumbling end-over-end rapidly to the ground"?
If not, you could try "as if the ground was stretching out towards him/her/it, greedy to have him/her/it in their clutch.
An example of a falling simile is "as easy as falling off a log".
"Falling like raindrops made of lead" is another good example.
Another example could be "I saw the man fall like dominoes". Or "I watched them fall like a tumbling house of cards".
Further Information:
I recommend a book called Similes Dictionary by Elyse Sommer. You can find it in these places:
LIke snowflakes on a wintery day.
as quiet as a falling leaf
simile
simile for stuck
no, it is personification a simile is when a sentence has "like" or "as"
LIke snowflakes on a wintery day.
One example of a simile in Shel Silverstein's "Falling Up" is "I'm turning into something that no one else has seen, something that's not too likely, something like a dream." This compares the transformation of the speaker into something unique and dreamlike using the word "like."
climax, rising action, falling action, simile, metaphor
as quiet as a falling leaf
A simile.
A metaphor
It is a simile.
As quick as a wink is a simile. ----
The simile poem in the 2nd stanza of "Ballad of a Mother's Heart" compares a mother's love to the "ever-falling drops of rain." Just as rain is constant and unending, the poem suggests that a mother's love is continuous and unwavering.
simile its a simile when you use "like"
simile It is an example of a simile (uses like or as). A simile in itself though is a type of metaphor.
Yes, that is a similie...A similie is any comparison that uses like or as. eg; the girl was as tall as a lamp post, or the sea is like a monster.A metaphor is a comparison that doesn't use like or as, eg; the girl was a lamp post, or the sea is a monster. That is where a lot of people get confused