i know you want only one but here are some that you can choose from .
No. A simile compares one thing to another. Therefore no one word by itself can be a simile and so the word "as" is not a simile. However the word "as" often forms part of a simile, for example: "he is as brave as a lion".
Yes. An example is, "The apple is like the starry night sky." A simile has to have the word 'like' in it.
It's raining cats and dogs
In simile, you use the words like, as. For example: "She is cute as a puppy."In metaphor, it does not use the words like, as.For example: "He is a pig."So to transform a simile to a metaphor, you should not use the words, like, as in the sentence.For example:Simile- I eat like a pig.Metaphor - I am a pig.Hope this helps.
Mulch is like a meal for plants.
He is as tall as a tree.
you and me together
Simile same.
An example of a simile is, 'The girl was slow as molasses.'
simile It is an example of a simile (uses like or as). A simile in itself though is a type of metaphor.
A simile is a figurative language that compares two things that are alike in some way. An example is the phrase as cute as a kitten.
Usually the figure of speech which is called a simile compares two words, or two objects or ideas, that describe things which normally aren't a bit like one another. An example of a simile is: 'My love is like a red, red rose.' Or, you might say, 'My maths test was as prickly as a holly bush.'
A simile.
simile
An example of a simile in Paul Revere's ride is "Like a torch in the night."
simile is a comparison of 2 objects using like and as. example: You're as dumb as a bag of rocks
A Homeric simile is a long and poetic simile. An example of a Homeric simile is: She gently touched the carpet, as a butterfly delicately swoops its wings against the dew covered grass in the morning, before it takes off into the sky.