Well of course that all depends on what was written before the written text you have here.
"As we humans grow old and nature grows new" in itself is not a simile, because there is a missing part to that, which would be the ending, if this were a sentence. You would have to say something like, "As we humans grow old and nature grows new, life is continuing as the grass stays green and the sky stays blue."
Even though the word "As" is used here, you aren't exactly comparing a human growing older and nature growing new *with* the word as such as so:
"Nature growing new is *as* humans growing older, always changing and leaving with the wind."
So, no, "as we humans grow old and nature grows new" is not a simile.
Yes, many organisms in nature grow in pairs, such as fish with two eyes, birds with two wings, and humans with two arms. Additionally, many plants have paired leaves or flowers.
It grows towards the sun, a direction we humans usually refer to as "up".
Grass, trees and crops cultivated by humans grow by the river Tiber.
Cancer cells replicate/grow very rapidly. The simile "Silence like a cancer grows" from the Simon and Garfunkel song The Sound of Silence is used to indicate a rapidly growing silence, and also gives a visual image of a swelling and malignant or harmful silence. (A simile such as " silence like a balloon grows" would have a positive imagery.)
it means exactly what it says grows means its growing and develops means whatever it is is developing. it means changing like for example: for humans our bodies grow and develope and for plants they grow and change and develop in different stages just like humans
wild plants are those which are not grown by humans and grow in nature. it also is no use for humans
get your own answer but all i know is that they grow. like humans i guess. i dont know
benefits of nature includes water, sun, and just anything that humans cant build or grow.
"Grows" is a third-person singular expression of the infinitive to grow. For example, "she grows," but "I grow," and "they also grow."
There are several things that grow naturally in India. Some of things are rubber plants, marijuana plants, and cotton plants.
The present tense of "grow" is "grows" when referring to he/she/it, or "grow" for I, you, we, and they.
The longer a molten material has to cool, the greater its crýstals may grow. Water frost grows in still weather. Frozen lava grows into spar and ore by ancient volcanos. Salt grows on seashores and in caves.