A simile for the feeling of squishy grass could be.... "the sponge was as squishy as wet grass". I don't reallly know.
Her eyes were as green as grass. "as green as grass" is the simile.
THE GRASS IS AS SHORT AS A MIDGET c:
A simile for "as bitter as" could be "as bitter as gall," referring to the intense bitterness of bile or stomach acid. This simile is often used to describe a feeling of extreme resentment or anger. It draws a comparison between the taste of bitterness and the emotional experience being described.
"As green as grass" "As green as a four-leaved-clover" "As green as a dollar bill" "As green as an emerald"
Something of a similar sense, feeling, or thought.
No, it's a metaphor, with a more exotic sense than a simile. "She wanted to be like a blade of grass amid the fields" is a simile.
Her eyes were as green as grass. "as green as grass" is the simile.
THE GRASS IS AS SHORT AS A MIDGET c:
you get a nice squishy feeling between your toes
interest
As green as fresh grass in spring.
No, this is not a simile. A simile is a figure of speech that compares two different things using the words "like" or "as." In the given phrase, "feeling like black was the thing to be" is not comparing two things.
as dirty as a hippo in mud
A Homeric simile is a long and poetic simile. An example of a Homeric simile is: She gently touched the carpet, as a butterfly delicately swoops its wings against the dew covered grass in the morning, before it takes off into the sky.
Feeling like flying? No, its a simile because it uses ''like'' or ''as'' to compare, where as a metaphor doesn't
the bright green blades of grass stand erect like soldier's on a battle field
This is a simile because it compares the feeling of the person's blood to ice using "like".