Your ears are as big as an elephants .
That is a good simile, yes.
No it is not a simile because it does not use the term like or as in its description. Were you to say patience is like an hourglass it would be a simile. The way you worded it makes it a metaphor.
no but if you were to say the green trees were like a sea then it is a simile because it contains like.
Well, honey, a simile compares two things using "like" or "as." So unless that pencil was busting out some killer dance moves like a ballerina, I'd say it's not a simile. Just call it what it is - a pencil doing the cha-cha on paper.
No, the word unfair is an adjective. A simile is a comparison; for example, Mrs. Jones is like a badger. If I were to say Mrs. Jones is unfair, that does not compare her to anything, it is just a description.
He is and floppy as bunnys ears.
That is a good simile, yes.
simile....because it has like in it
No it is not a simile because it does not use the term like or as in its description. Were you to say patience is like an hourglass it would be a simile. The way you worded it makes it a metaphor.
its a metephor or simile
What did we say to each other that now we are as the deer who walk in single file with heads high with ears forward with eyes watchful with hooves always placed on firm ground in whose limbs there is latent flight
no but if you were to say the green trees were like a sea then it is a simile because it contains like.
a simile is like a comparison or analogy, they are common in song lyrics- take the parody on the familiar Yule song- A Blonde, a Blonde, Naturally endowed, with a Breast as big as a cow. the verb as in the second clause makes it a simile, historicaly a simile uses Like or as- ( Blind as a bat) (Like a Rose). there are many in songs.
This phrase is neither a simile or metaphor, it is pesonification. if you want a simile you might say...The car was roaring like a cat. or a metaphor...the roaring car was a cat
I am here and all ears to listen to what you have to say.
A simile.
The word for "ears" in Maori is "taringa."