'Like two peas in a pod' is a simile.
A legume is a plant which produces it's fruit on halved pods. Examples of these are beans, lentils, peas, and peanuts.
Fresh Peas - 2010 was released on: USA: April 2010
tall
Metaphor: something is compared to something else without using the words "like" or "as" to make it obvious it is a comparison. "There was a sea of people at the concert": here a crowd is compared to a sea. Simile: something is compared to something else directly using words like "like" or "as". "He walked into the party like he was walking onto a yacht." Personification: talking about something inanimate as if it were a person. "The car made a real effort to get up that hill in third gear." Synechdoche: where you use part of something to represent the whole thing. "We could sure use a hand over here." Metonymy: where you use something associated with something else to represent it. "Car number 3 took the checkered flag." Oxymoron: two opposing concepts are jammed together "Two more hours of boring excitement followed." Alliteration: repetition of consonant sounds especially at the start of words. "Bert Brydenhart bulked big in Painted Rock." Zeugma: multiple objects of the same preposition which use the preposition in different senses. "She left in a rage and a taxi." "He hastened to put out the cat, the wine, his cigar and the lamps."
Peas and Carrots - 2006 was released on: USA: 5 May 2006 (Miami Canes Film Festival)
nonono
Two peas in a pod means to be very similar in something. In a literal sense, two peas in the same pod are identical. This expression is then used when two people, two animals, or objects are very alike.
The word 'peas' is a countable noun. Example: Each pod contains four to six peas.
Beans, peas, lentils, and peanuts.
Is a juice whicvh we get, example the lemon
Beans, peas, lentils, and peanuts.
For example in the roots of peas and beans.
Legumes do. Peas are a good example.
Nelson Mandelas used the strategy of pathos in his speech during the Noble Peace ceremony.
Two peas in a pod are very similar; they have no features by which they could be distinguished from each other by means of the naked eye. Microscopic examination (if anyone wanted to go to that much trouble) would show that although they are similar, they are not identical.
It is not "onomonopiea" It's "onomatopoeia". We use it when we want to compare someone or something with another thing such as "It was as silent as a graveyard" or "The two twins are alike as two peas".
In some countries peas are served as an appetiser, for example here in the UK some of our traditional appetisers are pea based, such as pea and ham soup and a speciality of Lancashire is a small appetiser dish of Black Peas, in the North East of England they serve pease pudding, the main ingredient being peas.