Just try to use metaphors instead. Just take out the like or as parts.
When Mawi was at his uncles house a snake slithered on top of Mawi when he was sleeping. They couldn't get the snake off without hurting Mawi or making the snake angry(if the snake was angry it might hurt Mawi) so they could only wait and pray. Nothing happened. The uncle thought it was to dangerous for kids to be with him, he didn't want their lives in danger.
As frightened as a mouse, she ran to her room and closed the door.
In Brutus' analogy of the snake, there is a fallacy. There is no connection between the snake and corruption. Analogies between animals and human qualities are often fallacies since animals operate on an instinctual level as opposed to having motivation and will as human beings do.
The pronoun that takes the place of the noun snake is it.Example: That snake will not like you approaching it.Note: If the gender of the snake is known, the pronouns that will replace the noun 'snake' are he or she as a subject, and him or her as an object in a sentence.it (if the gender is unknown)he or him (if the snake is a male)she or her (if the snake is a female)
snake (apex)
Yes there is a snake with two heads without tail, however such snakes are rarest of the rare.
A complimentary simile example would be 'he's as fit as as a fiddle' (athletic). A critical simile example would be 'he's a snake in the grass' (can't be trusted). It appears that more similes in general are critical than complimentary.
the snake slithered so smoothly, it was as if it was covered in butter
Such a snake would not be able to reproduce.
The snake does have an extensive spine or back bone. this animal is not an invertebrate.
kill them
Ireland.
It wouldn't be a rattle snake or snake without a tail. Would it??
one is "he hissed like a snake " n a metaphor is "he saw the speck of the gulf clouds soar high in the sky"
snake
It's dry - having a similar feel to leather.
Ireland has no Snakes.