Sometimes it has happened to some peoples that just before an event they had sensed it exactly as it occurred later.
Oh, dude, swimming in a sea of diamonds in a metaphor means you're in a situation where everything around you is super valuable and precious, like, literally diamonds everywhere. It's like being in a dream where you're surrounded by bling, but, like, not really because diamonds are hard and you can't actually swim in them. It's just a fancy way of saying you're in a really fortunate or luxurious situation.
This statement is a metaphor. It is comparing seasons to celebrations without using "like" or "as."
An inverted metaphor is a figure of speech where the subject and the things compared to it are reversed. For example, saying "The sun is a black hole of happiness" is an inverted metaphor because the sun (the subject) is being compared to a black hole (the metaphor).
A sharp wit is a metaphor for a clever person.
A metaphor is a flower. A simile is like (or as) a flower. Both metaphor and simile compare one thing to another. The difference is that a simile uses the words 'like' or 'as', and metaphor doesn't. Metaphor: Life is a fountain. Simile: Life is like a fountain.
A metaphor for fog could be a "veil of mystery" or a "blanket of uncertainty" that obscures clarity and vision.
Yes, it is.
Anna and she swam in the pool. It is easy to remember when you can state the sentence as: Anna swam in the pool. She swam in the pool (not: Her swam in the pool), so combined they would be Anna and she swam in the pool.
The past tense is swam. (I swam, you swam, they swam) The past participle is swum. Present perfect : he has swum Past perfect : he had swum Future perfect: he will have swum
I invented christmas and swam to hawaii before it was on maps
While swam is the past tense of swim, swumis the past-perfect tense of swim. Swam would be used in the following sentence: "We swam down the river yesterday." Swum would be used in the following sentence: "We had swum down the river yesterday before going inside for dinner." =D
Stephen got a vision of heavens opening before death
swam!!
Swam is one syllable.
SWAM is the past tense of the verb "to swim". For example, "I swam ten laps of the pool this morning".
A metaphor that rhymes. E.g. "I couldn't see tree number three before Lee drank tea."
They swim, they swim like they've never swam before :3