figurative speech (simile, metaphor, hyperbole)empathycharacter developmentP.O.V. (point of viewdialoguesettingplotstyle (diary, poem)problemAND LOTS MORE!
simile because it is comparing the cloud with a lonely man.
laziness, noncarefullness
A simile is a figure of speech that uses two essentially different things as a means of comparison usually with words such as "like" or "as." Here is an example of a simile from Shakespeare: "So are you to my thoughts as food to life"
A instd of a ballet shoe
simile not sorry
The simile that the author uses to describe Judge Taylor is "like a sleepy old shark."
Kristen Olson Murtaugh has written: 'Ariosto and the classical simile' -- subject(s): Literary style, Simile
A simile.
The author has uses a simile.
Yes, there is a simile in the book "Goosebumps: Night of the Living Dummy". In the second chapter, the author uses a simile to describe a character’s voice as being “like fingernails on a chalkboard”, which helps convey the unpleasantness of the sound.
A metaphor
It is a simile.
As quick as a wink is a simile. ----
simile
simile its a simile when you use "like"
The word simile is a noun. The teacher had the students read a poem called, The Secret Trunk, then asked them to find the simile used by the author.