Because they are the same type of comparison, the only difference is that one contains like or as.
This phrase is neither a simile or metaphor, it is pesonification. if you want a simile you might say...The car was roaring like a cat. or a metaphor...the roaring car was a cat
A metaphor directly substitute one thing for another as a comparison. Instead of using a simile, "Hope is like a bird," the metaphor might be, "Hope is a thing with feathers."
Metaphor...similes use like or as
"New apartment freedom to the young boy" can be seen as a metaphor, as it compares the sense of freedom the boy might feel in the new apartment to the concept of freedom itself without using 'like' or 'as' for comparison.
This is an example of simile. A direct comparison is being made between the brightness of [an unspecified subject] and the brightness of the sun. An example sentence might be:Her smile was as bright as the sun.
protists are unicellular
The probability is indeterminate. I might ask a student or I might not.
* * === === On the other hand, if you say "the rugby player cradled the giant egg ball" or "thistle spines pierced my skin when the cat leapt up", you are using metaphor. You are describing something as though it is actually something else. In one of my poems I call a dark cloud "a raven's wing". That's metaphor. I don't say the cloud is like a raven's wing. I wrote a poem called Silken Thingswhich is full of metaphor because the things are none of them actually made of silk. * === === Idioms are words, phrases, or expressions that cannot be taken literally. In other words, when used in everyday language, they have a meaning other than the basic one you would find in the dictionary. Every language has its own idioms. Learning them makes understanding and using a language a lot easier and more fun!
Europans, although they might confuse them with Europeans
St paul is the capital of minnesota
Dog Monkey Bear Pig Tiger
Dog Monkey Bear Pig Tiger