Sorghum is a genus of grasses, one of which is raised for grain, and others of which are used to feed animals. A sorghum mill is a building that refines raw sorghum grain into other products such as granular sugar or sorghum juice.
The author of this simile presents the sorghum mill as a place where a large quantity of "flies" might congregate to feed on the glucose-rich plant and reproduce. Flies are insects of the order Diptera that possess a pair of wings and a pair of hind wings on the thorax.
The word "thick" implies both a large quantity of flies and heightened activity due to the attractiveness of the sorghum. The author might imply that the comparable event is equally ravenous, highly populated, or attractive. However, without the context of the simile any further speculation would be hogwash. In fact, this whole answer might be hogwash.
It means that a butterfly flies around you at the river. :)
The phrase "fly as thick as driving rain" from the poem "From a Railway Carriage" by Robert Louis Stevenson describes a large number of flies buzzing around rapidly and densely, much like rain falling heavily and persistently. It highlights the intense and chaotic motion of the flies as observed from the passing train.
Depends what you mean. If you eat too much raw lard you will become rather thick around the thighs
look like both are similar but thair teast is different. millet--it is general name for this type of crops,pearl millet,etc sorghum mean only one type--jawari(hindi)
When a monarch butterfly flies around you everyday there are a few things that can be determined. One thing is that you are lucky.
it actually mean that duck eggs has a bad scent
It means you smell bad
I don't know what it means
Laying it on thick, spreading it on thick can either mean you are exaggerating or heaping praise on someone that you expect will help you.
It is dark and thick
Irritate means to annoy, like when a bug flies around you it irritates you.
Irritate means to annoy, like when a bug flies around you it irritates you.