yes
A Simile uses Like or AS - it's the part where they say "Like A ____"
It is simile since simile uses the words as and like
Any comparison that begins with "as" or "like" is a simile because it says that one thing is similar to another.
Yes, it is. Any sentence with a comparison using 'like' or 'as' is a simile.
SIMILE is Latin for LIKE - as in Similar, similitude etc.
A simile.
A Simile uses Like or AS - it's the part where they say "Like A ____"
A metaphor
no it is not a simile
Simile: “and Mom says it doesn’t help that some of these celebrity partners are as dumb as a bag of hair” (39). Simile: “Alice Evans was squirming in her chair like she was doing a hula dance” (80). Simile: “The oily water reflected the light and made the whole thing look like a sparkly fountain” (87). Simile: “The rose was perfect-just opening, like a picture in a magazine” (112). Simile: “It soaked into me like water into sand, fast and heavy-making” (120). Simile: “‘Julia needs money like a fish needs a bicycle” (129). Simile: "Losing Sal was like a long list of bad things" (16). Simile: "That sound was like the last thread connecting us" (86). Simile: "Mom is looking at us like we're crazy" (40). Simile: "while we both laughed like idiots" (70). Simile: "Mom says each of us has a veil between ourselves and the rest of the world, like a bride wears on her wedding day" (71). Simile: "sometimes our veils are pushed away for a few moments, like there's a wind blowing it from our faces" (71). Simile: "A web of tiny cracks covered the face like a cobweb" (93). Simile: "the cheese sandwich he hadn't eaten at lunch, soaking through its paper and smelling like pickles" (109). I couldn't find any metaphors :(
yes it is a simile because it has 'like'
Yes, if it has "like" or "as," it is a simile.
simile It is an example of a simile (uses like or as). A simile in itself though is a type of metaphor.
The similes are "raining like an open faucet" or "coming down like Niagara Falls." Another simile is "raining buckets." The familiar idiom is "raining cats and dogs."
Yes, it is a simile because because a simile has like/as, and a metaphor doesn't.
"It seemed funny to me that socs if these girls were any example were just like us".
"Dropped like a stone" is a simile because it uses "like" to compare the action of dropping to a stone.