ver tough
As tough as surrounding steel walls!
His pants were as wrinkled as an elephant! I'm not sure what you mean by an "original simile."
Don't you mean simile? A simile is a comparison using like or as. ie:She is like a jackrabbit when she dances.
it means your dick
windy
As tough as leather.
I don't understand the question
As tough as surrounding steel walls!
This is a simile comparing someone or something to nails. Nails are hard and tough, so this person or thing is being declared to be very hard and tough.
Think about this and you can figure it out. Are nails hard and tough? The kind made of steel certainly are - this simile compares someone's strength and toughness to that of a nail.
The rodeo was as tough as beef jerkey.
A porpoise has tough leather like skin body covering, that protects them from some predators.
No. The word "as" is never a verb. In a simile, like or as acts as a preposition (or, arguably, as a truncated version of a conjunction).Example:Bill is as tough as a bulldog (...is tough).He fights like a tiger (...fights).
Billy boy was tough as nails.
similes
leather tuscadero is pinky's tuscadero tough sister
Jealousy is like a green eyed monster.