This quotation is a metaphor. It compares taking arms against a sea of troubles to confronting and overcoming challenges in life.
Doubles, troubles, Hubble's, bubble's,Troubles, doubles
itolang ang mga nalaman ko... una simile=compares of two entity with the use of as & like. ex.her soul is as clean as newly washed garment. metaphor=comparison w/o the use of like or as. ex.a sea of troubles apostrophe=the writer addressed a person who is usually either absent,deceases,an inaminate object or an abstarct thing. ex.what ail's you,o see that you flee.
Her heart was a garden, blooming with love and tenderness.
layne long says METAPHOR for all you A+ kids
Shakespear did: To be, or not to be--that is the question: Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune Or to take arms against a sea of troubles And by opposing end them. So i guess it is ok
Benvolio tells Lady Montague that Romeo retreated to the "covert of the wood" to hide his sorrows. This metaphor likens Romeo's emotional distress to a physical presence that he seeks to conceal within the safety of the forest, highlighting his desire to escape from the world's troubles.
A metaphor is a figure of speech, meaning when a word or phrase that ordinarily describes one thing is used to describe another, creating an implicit comparison, as in "a sea of troubles"or "All the world's a stage"
The Troubles happened in 196#.
Private troubles are personal problems.
To protect people where people on opposing sides of the troubles lived close to each other. They prevented people going into each other's areas and causing trouble, and so helped keep the peace.
The troubles were between 1969 and 1998.
Cortina Troubles happened in 1859.