Want this question answered?
more playful This is the comparative form of playful. Because playful has two syllables then use more. For smaller adjectives -er is added to the adjective eg big -- bigger, small -- smaller
"salty"
It is always an adjective. It can appear to be an appositive noun (e.g. Carnac the Magnificent) but this is part of a title using the adjective (e.g. The Magnificent Ambersons).
It can be, such as in the sentence, "I took out the cookies using an oven mitt."
governments have been in critcal circumstances
more playful This is the comparative form of playful. Because playful has two syllables then use more. For smaller adjectives -er is added to the adjective eg big -- bigger, small -- smaller
a metaphor
Similes make comparisons using "like" or "as," while metaphors make direct comparisons without using "like" or "as." Similes create a clear comparison between two things, while metaphors imply a comparison by stating that one thing is another.
Yes: a simile compares two things using "like" or "as".
a diagram that compares 2 or more things using 2 or more interlapping circles
No, a metaphor directly compares two unlike things without using like or as. For example, "Her heart is a stone" is a metaphor because it compares the heart to a stone without using like or as.
That's correct! A simile is a figure of speech that compares two things using "like" or "as" to highlight similarities between them. It helps create vivid imagery and enhance the reader's understanding by drawing a comparison in a clear and direct way.
A metaphor compares two things without using the words "like" or "as". For example: Her hair was the dark night sky.
allusion is indirectly and reader should realize the difference by themselves. in metaphor the writer make the first object and second object kind of the equal thing and will tell the reader what is the point that make them the same thing.
metaphor
Column
Column