...forever trip into mystery.
Then, the whining schoolboy with his satchelAnd shining morning face, creeping like asnailUnwillingly to go to school
Yes, there is a simile in Sonnet 29 by William Shakespeare. The line "Like to the lark at break of day arising" contains a simile comparing the speaker's mood to a lark ascending in the morning.
school can be like a bowl of cherries, sometimes sweet, sometimes sour
An empty school is like a ghost town, with echoing hallways and silent classrooms.
A simile.
A metaphor
no it is not a simile
yes it is a simile because it has 'like'
Yes, if it has "like" or "as," it is a simile.
simile It is an example of a simile (uses like or as). A simile in itself though is a type of metaphor.
Yes, it is a simile because because a simile has like/as, and a metaphor doesn't.
"Dropped like a stone" is a simile because it uses "like" to compare the action of dropping to a stone.