His eyes were a tranquil green pool, flecked with brown and gold in the sunlight (metaphor)
or
Her eyes were hazel like emeralds burried in dirty (simile)
That is definitely a metaphor :)
metaphor
His eyes were a tranquil green pool, flecked with brown and gold in the sunlight
Metaphor. :)If you said, "Her eyes were like sapphires," then that would be a simile, because you are comparing her eyes with sapphires using like or as. An example with using as to make a simile would be, "Her eyes were as beautiful assapphires."With metaphors, you kind of "silently" compare two things, because you don't like or as. Instead, you use is, are, or were to say that her eyes are literally sapphires, but aren't really.Hope that helped. :)
Her eyes were the sea.
it would be hazel i believe my mom has that color of eyes and she says that it is hazel
Hazel eyes are not highly common. They are eyes that can change color from brown to green, and somewhere in between. A genotype of Gg would produce hazel eyes.
Hazel eyes are hazel eyes. People with hazel eyes are commonly said to have gray eyes. People who have gray eyes are commonly mistaken for having hazel eyes.
That's a metaphor - the eyes are compared to a slab of mackerel. Many people confuse METAPHORE and SIMILE. A simile is a specific kind of metaphor that uses the words "Like" or "as" or "than" - "My love is like a red red rose" is a simile, but "His career was a house of cards" is a metaphor. They are tricky to grasp sometimes, because Professors of English love to torment students.
Metaphor. Here's an example: Her eyes were bright stars shining in the darkness. This is an example of a simile, which is the opposire of a metaphor (uses like or as): Her eyes were as bright as stars shining in the darkness. or Her eyes were bright, like stars shining in the darkness.
Hazel
No, The color of you eyes are determined by your genes. Say your mom has brown eyes and you dad has green or blue. If you mom's color eye was a dominant gene you would have brown eyes but if your dad had the dominant gene you would have green or blue eyes. Sometimes both genes are dominant If that was the case the colors would mix and most likely create hazel eyes, the facts that your uncle has hazel eyes might be a coincidence or he passes that gene on in your mother or father and it ended up in you. I hoped this helped it's kind of confusing, I also have hazel eyes -Caitlyn