Lots of them. Allusions to Phoebus and Phaeton. Night is personified as someone drawing a curtain, and later as a sober-suited matron. Oxymoron: Learn me how to lose a winning match. Simile: "Whiter than new snow on a raven's back." and "So tedious is this day as is the night before some festival . . ." She apostrophizes night: "Come, gentle night!" And my favourite metaphor: "I have bought the mansion of a love but not posessed it." All that in one speech! No wonder it's so good.
There are several. The sun is described in Greek mythological terms as fiery footed horses. The night is described as a sober-suited matron. Romeo in the night is described as being like snow on a raven's back.
It does seem sort of strange for a recovering alcoholic to go out in the middle of the night on dark bike rides and then return home. A sober person who has been sober for over a year might be having a relapse if he or she is leaving the house in the middle of the night.
ummm dont drink any alchohol duhhh
The comparative and superlative forms of sober are more sober and most sober, respectively.
The abstract noun for "sober" is "sobriety." Abstract nouns refer to qualities, conditions, or states that cannot be perceived by the senses. In this case, "sobriety" represents the state of being sober, characterized by clarity of mind and lack of intoxication.
A simile for "sober" could be: "As sober as a judge." "As sober as a monk." These similes compare sobriety to figures known for their seriousness and self-control.
The opposite of sober (unimpaired) would be inebriated, drunk, high, or intoxicated. The opposite of sober (serious) would be frivolous, flippant, or farcical.
That is the correct spelling of "sober" (serious, or not intoxicated).
Yes He got sober for his Daughters.
If they drink too much, they'll either stay over night at wherever they are or get someone sober to drive them home.
Only time will sober a person.