Compare is a verb.
Compare is a verb.
Compare is a verb.
Compared is a verb. It is the past tense of the word compare.
Similarities between similes and metaphors are that they both compare two things that are not related and they are both termed a figure of speech, which ironically is a metaphore.
Compared is a verb. It is the past tense of the word compare.
metaphor
No. Compare means to look at the similarities, and contrast means to look at the differences.
compare and contrast President bush speech after 9/11 and the pearl harbor speech by fdr....
It is called a metaphor when you compare a person to an inanimate object. Metaphors are figures of speech that make a comparison between two unlike things.
"Slowest" is a superlative adjective, used to compare three or more things in terms of speed.
Brutus's purpose was to control the crowd as was Anthony's. Brutus began his speech with a hostile crowd against him as a murderer of the popular Julius Caesar.
Metaphor,desire can't be tasted as food.the poet compare something that can be tasted to the desire.