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No. One word does not make a metaphor. "Bob is groaning" would be the closest you could get, but that is a statement, not a metaphor.
An inverted metaphor is a comparison suggesting that one object is another. example: A simple metaphor:-John is a fox. An inverted metaphor:-Foxy John.
"I am a rock!" is a metaphor.
one metaphor is " the puppy was the color of chocolate "
A metaphor in which one of the things being compared is not directly named
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
The most popular metaphor for a bee is the one about being busy. Busy as a bee is a metaphor used world wide.
A metaphor is a flower. A simile is like (or as) a flower. Both metaphor and simile compare one thing to another. The difference is that a simile uses the words 'like' or 'as', and metaphor doesn't. Metaphor: Life is a fountain. Simile: Life is like a fountain.
The whole speech is one big extended metaphor. "All the world's a stage . . .", well like a stage anyway. Which is why this is a metaphor.
No, not on its own. Metaphor depends on context; how you use it makes it one.
One example of a love metaphor is below: Love is the glue that holds the world together.