it can be sometimes. for example, 'she was a brave as a lion'. a lion is a noun. but it also doesn't have to be. for example, 'she was like a dream'. a dream isn't real.
Yes, the word 'similes' is the plural form of the singular noun 'simile', a word for a figure of speech; a word for a thing.
Yes the word simile is a noun. A simile is a figure of speech.
No, you should not think that. Simile is like
No it's not !!!
Hell NO
No
no]
no
No, it is not an adverb. The word simile is a noun, a literary device that compares attributes using the words 'as" or "like."
As a noun: chore, job As a verb: to labor
The noun calmness is based on the adjective calm. (Calm can also be a noun or verb.)
Some words that use the root 'firm' are:affirmaffirmativeconfirmconfirmationfirmlyinfirminfirmaryinfirmityreaffirmreaffirmationreconfirmunconfirmed
A simile is a word you use to describe something. If it has the word as or like, comparing one thing to another it is a simile. Sentance: The man jumped like a kangaroo. or The man jumped as high as a kangaroo.
Velvet is a noun that represents a type of fabric, so it is neither a simile nor a metaphor. Similes and metaphors are figures of speech that compare two different things using "like" or "as" (simile) or by stating that one thing is another (metaphor).
A simile.
The word simile is a noun. The teacher had the students read a poem called, The Secret Trunk, then asked them to find the simile used by the author.
A metaphor
A simile is a comparison - what do you know that is quiet? As quiet as new-fallen snow? As quiet as a mouse? You pick a good one!
This is a simile because it uses the word "as" to describe the library. A metaphor does not use the words "like" or "as" to describe a noun.
It is a simile.