Here is an example sentence using "federal" as a simile:
"He's just a local cop, but he was acting like a federal agent."
--Similes require the use of "like" or "as" to make a comparison or description, I prefer to use "federal" as a metaphor:
--"I only got drunk once last month...it was a holiday and you know I don't drive or own a car... you don't have to make a federal case out of it."
it is a simile that can be learned in many ways
yes, Simile example The flowers glisten as it was trees
The answer is "a fracture and an engraved name are compared using the word 'like' "... the meaning of a simile is a figure of speech involving a comparison of one thing with another of a different kind, used to make a sentence more vivid.
You can use the word "hungry" in a simile like this: I am as hungry as a wolf.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
it is a simile that can be learned in many ways
yes, Simile example The flowers glisten as it was trees
You could use the sentence, 'The custard was thick as mud.'
simile
yes, using a simile "like or as".
He was arrested for breaking Federal wiretap laws.
The answer is "a fracture and an engraved name are compared using the word 'like' "... the meaning of a simile is a figure of speech involving a comparison of one thing with another of a different kind, used to make a sentence more vivid.
Every 4 years, the populace votes in federal elections.
Enumerated powers belong only to the federal government.
Every 4 years, the populace votes in federal elections.
Simile
The banana that the monkey was eating tasted like apples instead. ~my example You can use it if you want but a simile has like or as in it.