you are a beautiful little bird.
Another Answer:
How about "Birds of a feather flock together" or "A bird in the hand is worth two in a bush" or "Don't count your chicken before they hatch.
You can compare birds to anything at all - that's the beauty of the language! You might show birds as freedom because they can fly, or as insignificant because they are small, or even as godlike because they see everything from above.
Think of birds in a tree or on a fence. They are singing their particular songs. This is a choir of birds and it is full of joy.
simile, it uses 'as'
It's a metaphor because it likens human parents to bird parents. Birds feather their nests in preparation for their young. The sentence compares humans getting ready for their baby to birds getting ready for their babies.
Its a metaphor
It is a metaphor.
it is neither, it is personification
The literary term that describes "birds of a feather flock together" is an idiom. This expression conveys the idea that people with similar characteristics or interests tend to associate with one another.
It's a metaphor for sex, the parents when explaining sex to the children used peanuts rather than the birds and the bees.
"He was a lion in the fight" is a metaphor.
Implied metaphor is when it gives you the metaphor but doesn't tell what the subject is. A regular metaphor tells you the subject of it.
metaphor
Metaphor