No. Bob ran like the wind is not a metaphor ,it is a simile because you used the words like the
Frosty made a "happy, thumpity-thump-thump" sound as he ran through town.
"Ran" is the past tense of the verb "run", used to describe an action that occurred in the past. "Run" is the present tense form of the verb, used to describe an action that is happening now or is a general truth.
They are both an alternate energy and they both helping the environment. Neither source provides any real power and the cost of energy used to create the devices is never given back (net result is less then green... more power to make then ever is produced). Fossil fuel plants must be ran behind both systems to provide power during lulls in sun or wind. Both produce roughly 10% of what they claim to create. Wind is different in that it kills birds and bats. Both are insanely bad ideas from an environmental standpoint.
If I ran out of energy, I would need to be recharged or connected to a power source to continue functioning. It's important to have sufficient energy reserves to operate efficiently.
Archimedes - he was a Greek mathematician and inventor from Syracuse in the third century BCE. Legend says that he was asked by a king to figure out a way to ensure that his crown was all real gold. As he was in his bath he realised that when something is floating in water it displaces water equal to the weight of the object, ad when something sinks in water it displaces water equal to its volume. He was so excited, the legend says, that he jumped out of the bath and ran to tell the king, shouting "Eureka" - which is Greek for "I've found it" (meaning "I had found the answer to the king's question"). no this isn't true ran did. ran ran down the street
cheetah
A metaphor
This is way to vague and confusing. Please rephrase and resubmit. Be more specific.
it means to run as possible as you can
'Twas a metaphor.
It means to run extremely fast.
A simile is a comparison of two unlike things using like or as. Example: He ran like the wind, or she as fast as the wind.
A simile is comparasion using ''as'' or ''like'' ( His hand was red like a tomato) Metaphor is the same thing without the as or like (His brother is a pig)
Bob and street are the nouns in this sentence. Bob is a proper noun, a name.
Metaphors are comparisons between two dissimilar things. The use of a metaphor is a way to describe something. Authors use them to make their writing more interesting or entertaining, sometimes easier to understand.Similes are a specific type of metaphor that use the words "as" or "like" to make a comparison; a simple metaphor states that something is something else.For example,"Bob ran like the wind" This is a simile.Because the sentence compares Bob's running ability to the wind it is a metaphor. Because it makes the comparison using the word "like," it is a simile."Bob is a purebred racehorse.""Life is a journey.""Time is a thief."These are all metaphors (but not similes), as they say that each thing is something that, quite obviously, it is not (and does not make the comparison using the words like or as.)All metaphors consist of two parts: the vehicle and the tenor. The vehicle is the figurative expression, that is the concept, idea, or thing that is being used to make the comparison. The tenor is the idea that is illustrated or illuminated by the vehicle.For instance: in the sentence "Life is a journey," journey is the vehicle, and Life is the tenor.Beyond the simple metaphor and similes, there are actually many different types or expressions of metaphors. Some of these include:absoluteburlesquecatachreticcomplex (or telescoped)conceptual (or generative)conventionalcreativedeadextendedgrammaticalmixedontologicalpersonificationprimaryrootstructuralsubmergedtherapeuticvisual
Bob ran in a race on May,6 1997
Yes. It is.