That ice cream is a generous mountain.
No. One word does not make a metaphor. "Bob is groaning" would be the closest you could get, but that is a statement, not a metaphor.
You could use "a twig".
you r dumm
A metaphor, as defined in our glossary, is a figure of speech in which an implied comparison is made between two unlike things that actually have something important in common. The word metaphor itself is a metaphor, coming from a Greek word meaning to "transfer" or "carry across." Metaphors "carry" meaning from one word, image, or idea to another.
Metaphor is a comparison that does not use any explicit comparing words. All religions, arts, and sciences are branches of the same tree
He used a metaphor to desciribe the swaying trees.
I say the word ''metaphor.''
I was feeling generous, so I gave her the last cookie.
1. He is a very generous person. 2. Maybe, if she would be more generous, I would be able to use her car... 3. Please take a generous helping.
no
The superlative for the word generous is most generous.
"A stream of love"
metaphor
a compairison of two unlike words starting with the word is
"Courageous firefighter" isn't a word.
Generous is an adjective, so it doesn't have tenses. You could pair it with a verb and say was generous, is generous, will be generous. Or you could use the word "give" instead, and say gave, gives, will give.
more generous, most generous