silk
A simile for increase, or/and increasing could be like "A race car on a speed track." Or "A wolf hunting down prey."
One sentence could be "Blood was leaking out of them like water from a faucet."
When you see the words "like" or "as" you are looking at a simile - it's a comparison of two things.
No. The song "Titanium" by David Guetta actually has a metaphor. "You shoot me down, but I won't fall, I am titanium." A metaphor is a direct comparison of two unlike things. But a simile needs "like" or "as" to make the comparison. If Guetta had said "I'm like titanium," you would have simile.
It is simile since simile uses the words as and like
The simile for a cool breeze is like having water run down your face
no it is not a simile
This is a simile because it compares the flow of electric current to the flow of water in a river bed using "like."
The similes are "raining like an open faucet" or "coming down like Niagara Falls." Another simile is "raining buckets." The familiar idiom is "raining cats and dogs."
A simile for increase, or/and increasing could be like "A race car on a speed track." Or "A wolf hunting down prey."
Any comparison that uses like or as is a simile. Otherwise it is a metaphor. Like a giant bird flapping its wings, the airplane flew over the field. Simile. The airplane accelerated down the runway and with a mighty leap the giant bird flew into the sky. Metaphor
A simile.
they swim like wigling worms
A metaphor
Well a simile is comparing two things using 'like' or 'as.' This is comparing snow to feathers, and uses 'like' so I believe it is a simile.
hit me like a tsunami hit me like a truck hit me like ice cold water
SIMILE=something using like or as in a sentence.