Simile floated in the air like a cloud in the atmosphere.
It is related to the phrase smoke and mirrors. There is nothing substantial about what they are saying, it is just hot air.
One simile could be "tore through the air like a hyperactive Superman".Another might be "tore through the air like an owl silently swooping towards his prey"."Tore through the air as quick as a bullet" is another.Further Information:I recommend a book called Similes Dictionary by Elyse Sommer. You can find it in these places:Amazon UKAmazon USI also recommend a useful website called Simile Stack, though it may not be as insightful as the book. Click here to visit it.
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The snow was as thick as a wool blanket over the frozen ground: Simile
Smoke eddied means a current of air water moving against the main current
A simile is a comparison by using like or as. Ex. He flew through the air like a bird
A simile is a comparison by using like or as. Ex. He flew through the air like a bird
floated, (the past tense of float)
That is the correct spelling of "floated" (was held on the surface of a liquid, or in the air, by buoyancy).
floated
It is related to the phrase smoke and mirrors. There is nothing substantial about what they are saying, it is just hot air.
I surrender, like the summer air surrenders to the fierce cold of winter.
Sound For my boys in A+
" The air was like the air coming from a blast furnace." is a metaphor. "Harold, when he was angry, was a bull." is a simile. (simm-uh-lee)
some brothers don't care about sisters and that's the truth
In the sentence "the ball shot straight up, into the air like a rocket", "like a rocket" is a simile. A simile is when something is like something else, but not the something else. This is a describing technique.So in this sentence, it means that the ball moved like a rocket would move.
The same as first hand smoke. The smoke is in the air, you breathe the air, you're inhaling smoke. Just like the oxygen goes to your cells, certain properties of the smoke go with it.