The clouds are really puffy and look life overgrown marshmallows that you want to eat!
the sky is pritty
The clouds were light and soft; they were elergant
What does it mean
They are very white
The clouds are very puffy and big!!!
The sky is pritty.
Intermittent clouds mean it will be mostly sunny with periods of cloudiness from time to time.
it mean no matter how much you dream, always stay grounded. like if your heads in the clouds and your dreaming about something always stick to reality
nothing . haaah .
If you mean clouds on Moon, then no, because the Moon doesn't have any kind of atmosphere (or water) and therefore doesn't have any clouds. If you mean clouds on Earth, then yes. Just go out and look.
Thunderstorm clouds hidden inside other clouds or cloud mass
The clouds and marshmallows are both soft.
I believe you mean "metaphor." A metaphor is a comparison between two unlike things without using the words "like" or "as." It is much like a similie. A similie, however, uses the words "like" or "as." An example of a metaphor would be, "Her words were needles piercing me."
The clouds looks fluffy.
Metaphor- comparing two things without using like or as. Simile- comparing two things using like or as.
A Metaphor is a word you use its like say if I said: "The Moon IS cheese!" It doesn't mean it IS. its just a way of describing it. But if you but it is LIKE something then its called a simile.
In "A Tale of Two Cities," the metaphor of the suit of clothes suggests the idea of transformation and change. Just as one changes their clothes to take on a different appearance, characters in the novel undergo personal transformations that reflect the societal and political changes happening around them during the French Revolution. The metaphor highlights the theme of identity and the impact of external events on individuals.
In Latin, the prefix Alto- means 'high' for clouds like Altocumulus, and Altostratus.
comparing two things without using the word like or as
The simile 'clouds looked like puffs of cotton' means that the clouds were fluffy and soft in appearance, similar to the texture of cotton. It paints a vivid picture of the clouds as light, airy, and billowy in the sky.
Do you mean: Is 'cold as ice' a metaphor or a simile? If so, it is a simile because 'cold as ice' uses as. A simile is a comparison that uses like or as. A metaphor is a comparison that DOES NOT use like or as. Hope that helps. :)
i would think that means the sky is very cloudy-- the clouds shaped like leaves
A metaphor compares two objects that are different without like or as. A metaphor would be "the moon is a cookie". Kick him right square does not compare two things, so it would not be a metaphor. It seems more like an idiom, which does not mean what it is saying. For example, the idiom "Kick the bucket" means death, but a new speaker to English cannot tell because it does not mean what it literally says.