silk
silk
Silk
Like a starving Sudanese 3 year olds tears after not being fed for 2 years straight
the simle is like A JACK HAMERR hope you like IT.
like a hungry baby's tears
Flour
Uuuuu
A simile for increase, or/and increasing could be like "A race car on a speed track." Or "A wolf hunting down prey."
The simile for a cool breeze is like having water run down your face
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.
The simile for a cool breeze is like having water run down your face
no it is not a simile
Simile
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.
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
they swim like wigling worms
A metaphor
A simile.
simile its a simile when you use "like"
hit me like a tsunami hit me like a truck hit me like ice cold water