A simile is a comparison, so you can finish it any way you like. For example, you might say "as right as rain," which is an idiom meaning that something is all right or repaired correctly.
No. A simile compares one thing to another. Therefore no one word by itself can be a simile and so the word "as" is not a simile. However the word "as" often forms part of a simile, for example: "he is as brave as a lion".
Yes. An example is, "The apple is like the starry night sky." A simile has to have the word 'like' in it.
You could use something like "my bed is as hard as a rock" or you could use something like "When you lay on my bed its like sleeping on a rock." so those are two examples....... By the way the definition of simile is when you compare two words using like or as..... Just wanted to tell you!
"Her heart shattered as crystal broken by musical notes." "His brain limped as a cow dragging a broken leg." "My song pierced the air as a shard digs into flesh."
no a simile is when something is like something for example as snug as a bug in a rug meaning comfortable ( and a little humorous )
simile
simile
A Homeric simile is a long and poetic simile. An example of a Homeric simile is: She gently touched the carpet, as a butterfly delicately swoops its wings against the dew covered grass in the morning, before it takes off into the sky.
comparing something using like, as , or than
Example? Metaphor? Parallel? Parable? Simile? Lie? Fib?
As sweet as sugar or as sweet as honey.
Simile same.
That's a simile. A comparison of something to something else using the word "like" or "as".
An example of a simile is, 'The girl was slow as molasses.'
simile It is an example of a simile (uses like or as). A simile in itself though is a type of metaphor.
As obsolete as a rotary phone in the age of smartphones.