He is snoring louder than a bear. Resting quieter than a baby after she is fed.
Implied metaphor is when it gives you the metaphor but doesn't tell what the subject is. A regular metaphor tells you the subject of it.
Uh...I guess you will just have to another metaphor to describe the sentence!always remind your self
a common metaphor I've seen is"when pigs fly"hope i helped_________X__
a metaphor is " my heart shattered to pieces" ur welcome people
the giver
its a metaphor
Sleeping.
Sleeping is the metaphor Thoreau frequently uses.
Sleeping is the metaphor Thoreau frequently uses.
Metaphor
It means that the sound of the crowing of the rooster (cockerel) in the mornings woke the soldiers up. The rooster acted like an alarm clock. 'Alarm clock' is therefore a metaphor for 'rooster'. Had the sentence read 'The far-off rooster was like an alarm clock for the sleeping soldiers' it would have been a simile.
The earthquake was a sleeping giant that suddenly awoke, shaking the ground beneath our feet with its mighty roar.
When the author in "The Giver" describes the community as sleeping, she is suggesting that the people are living in a state of ignorance and conformity. They are unaware of the truth and reality of their world, as they have been sheltered from emotions, memories, and free will. The "sleeping" metaphor highlights the numbness and passivity that pervades their society.
Its a metaphor
In this metaphor, a dream is like a blanket that envelops us, providing comfort and warmth while we sleep. Just as a dream can shield us from the harsh realities of the world, a blanket wraps us in a sense of security and tranquility.
here: I am just a goose Waiting for fall to arrive So i can spread wings
it is neither, it is personification