Similes
Similes
Similie
Simile
A simile is when you compare one thing with another thing but they are completely different. Some examples include brave as a lion and as cold as an ice cube.
No, but it's slang. An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make any sense unless you know the definition. "Stop talking crazy" means "stop speaking nonsense" or "stop speaking like a crazy person would."
Putting on a brave front while shaking like jello on the inside.
The mentally ill are treated in hospitals and clinics that specialize in mental illness. The term 'crazy' and 'crazy people' is a generic term that can mean anything wild, violent, oddball, enthusiastic, or strange. A crazy person doesn't equal a mentally ill person. The word 'crazy' can be a positive or a negative description. Examples: She wears such crazy clothes. He's just girl crazy. When I said that, she went crazy. He ran like crazy. That was a crazy thing to do. I think the word you seek is an asylum.
Crazy (Nuts) Like a Fox--The individual referred to is not crazy at all, rather cunning (like a fox). Used when one appears to be 'crazy', but is acting with a hidden motive, in a cunning way Person 1 : "What's that guy doing? He's crazy" Person 2 : "Yeah...Crazy like a FOX!"
as crazy as a famous person in a Hollywood club
The phrase "crazy about" means you really like something. Example sentences: She's just crazy about Justin Timberlake and her ipod is full of his songs. The kids are crazy about macaroni and cheese and it's hard to get them to eat anything else.
A simile is when you compare one thing with another thing but they are completely different. Some examples include brave as a lion and as cold as an ice cube.
No, but it's slang. An idiom is a phrase that doesn't make any sense unless you know the definition. "Stop talking crazy" means "stop speaking nonsense" or "stop speaking like a crazy person would."
Some examples of prepositions are about, above, under, between and over. A prepositional phrase consists of the preposition and the words after the preposition, completing the phrase. These words are only prepositions when in a prepositional phrase. These phrases do not have verbs, and are often used to describe things, like an adjective would. Some examples of prepositional phrase are "under the table" or "near the lake"
Putting on a brave front while shaking like jello on the inside.
This is a rough translation of tu sei pazzo. Meaning "you are crazy" or "thou art crazy". When English speaking people hear this Italian phrase it sounds like "doosie pots" or doozy bots" to their ears.
It's a line from a song in the 1920's ("Crazy Words, Crazy Tune"). It doesn't really mean anything -- just a nonsense phrase that caught on, like "Doh!" recently.
Fight Like a Brave was created on 1987-09-29.
Maybe indomitable.
'To figure out' is a verbal phrase - that is, a phrase that works like a verb.Eg. He solvedthe problem.He figured out the problem.Other examples of verbal phrases are: to wake up, to come across.
The duration of Like Crazy is 1.5 hours.