Simile
Simile. it uses as
yes
In a metaphor you identify something with something else: Her hair was gold. In an idiom you use some words to mean something different from their literal meaning; they usually can't translate into other languages: Don't pull my leg.
Yes, hair does rhyme with square.
Eighteen thousandths of a millimeter. 0.0018 cm = 0.018 mm = 18 µm (micrometer) Human hair width actually ranges from 17 to 181 µm. 181 µm is almost .2 mm so you could say "about a fifth of a millimeter for coarse hair"
Simile. it uses as
simile, it uses 'as'
yes
Its a metaphor because its saying that when your hair stands on its end, its a goosebump...its not comparing using like or as (simile).
no. it is a similie.
this is a metaphor. like or as are used in simlies, in metaphors people use was and were and stuff
It is a simile because it uses the word an. Haha, I had the excact same question on my grammer worksheet in school. \ / _
It is a metaphor because it does not include like or as.
she has a shiny GLDENbeautiful hair in Summer sun.
A simile is when something is described by comparing it to something else by using the words "as", "like" or "than". For example "float like a feather" or "green as grass". The difference between a simile and a metaphor is that the metaphor says that something is. Simile - Her hair is like gold in the sun. Metaphor - Her hair is gold in the sun.
their hair was a messy tangle made up of fishing nets
No, anything with 'like' or 'as' is a simile.