As Busy As A Bee is also a simile. Remember a Simile is figure of speech which involves a comparison between unlike things.
For example: The leaves dances like a belly dancer as the wind blows.
As busy as a bee
Her teeth is as bright as the shining moon at night.
As white as snow. etc......
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As busy as a bee :))
The simile of the word "busy" could be "as busy as a bee" to show someone is very active and constantly moving around.
Bees are literally as busy as bees. The word "literally" means it is not a simile or a metaphor.
The peddler was as busy as a bee, flitting from customer to customer with his goods.
'She works as hard as a busy worker bee.'Is this okay?
No, "felt on top of the world" is not a simile. It is an idiom used to express feeling extremely happy or successful. A simile is a figure of speech that compares two unlike things using "like" or "as," such as "as busy as a bee."
A simile in "Beezus and Ramona" could be, "Ramona was as busy as a bee." This comparison uses "as" or "like" to show a similarity between Ramona and a bee in terms of being energetic and active.
Yes. A simile is any comparison that explicitly uses the word "like" or "as"; for example, "as strong as a bull," "quiet as the grave," or "he runs like the wind." The other common type of comparison is a "metaphor," which does not use those words. Usually they state (superficially) that something IS something else instead of being LIKE something else. For example, "that that linebacker is an absolute beast." So if I say "this beer tastes like horse urine," that's a simile. If I say "this beer is horse urine," that's a metaphor. Since "as busy AS a bee" uses the word "as," it's a simile.
Simile: I am as busy as a bee. Metaphor: I am a distant cloud in the sky. Personification: The chair smiled at me.
A simile.
Similes are the words that are used to compare things .It is usually done with the usage of like and as .example i'm busy like a bee ,here like is the simile.
My friend knows, having worked in an heritage village, but is she says she is too busy at the moment putting away dishes to answer the question. Sorry about that.
A simile is a comparison between two things that usually employs the use of "like, than, or as." Here is a simile using the woA simile is a comparison that employs the use of "like, than, or as." Here is a simile using the word "restaurant" as asked in the question: Stan was as busy as a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day. Stan was busier than a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day. Stan hurried like the staff at a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day.