Certainly ! Freshly-fallen snow is pure white. It only becomes tarnished through man-made pollution - snow can sometimes be contaminated and become grey or pink. Similes aren't meant to be inexhaustible though, there's a limit on how closely two things can be compared. But that doesn't matter though, when people think of snow, they usually think of a pure white, hence the usage in this simile.
'As white as snow' is a simile.
It is a simile because it uses the word an. Haha, I had the excact same question on my grammer worksheet in school. \ / _
snow
yes there is a simile for e.g snow white hair was as dark as the night sky
The mans hair is as white as snow is a simile.
A white puddle is a simile for snow. A simile is a figure of speech in which two unlike things are explicitly compared. If snow is melting it would look like a white puddle. Example: I went to the park after the snow storm last night. This afternoon was very warm, and the sun melted some of the snow...making it look like white puddles.
This is an example of a simile, where a comparison between two different things (in this case the fleece and snow) is made using the words "like" or "as."
Well a simile is comparing two things using 'like' or 'as.' This is comparing snow to feathers, and uses 'like' so I believe it is a simile.
Lets see.... A few examples would be in the latter. Your teeth are as white as the whitest cloud in the world. Those shoes are as white as the sand at white sands in New Mexico. Those socks are as white as bleached paper
Zebras like cows have black and white fur.
'Beached' is when something lands on the beach - like a ship or a whale. 'Beached as' is an incomplete simile meaning 'very beached'. For example, 'white as snow' is a simile that could be colloquially shortened to 'white as' meaning very white. 'Bro' is just a shortened version of 'brother'.
Your smile is like a ray on sun. The house is as cold as snow.