The phrase "the perfect sky is torn" is a metaphor because it implies a direct comparison between the sky and something being torn without using "like" or "as."
'torn out' is two words. it is correct if you put it into a sentence... for example if you say 'My heart is torn out' as a metaphore. Torn out on its own does not make sense
"shrieks like mandrakes torn out of the earth" (scene 3)
The quote uses a simile, comparing the strips of skin torn from the character's hands to pebbles stuck in the suckers of an octopus dragged from its lair. This simile creates a vivid image by likening the two situations, emphasizing the pain and struggle the character is experiencing.
Has/have torn.I have tornWe have tornYou have tornHe/she has tornThey have torn
"Like pebbles stuck in the suckers of some octopus dragged from its lair - so strips of skin torn." (Fagles, p. 165, lines 476-477)
If they are ripped, torn, or stretched, no. O-rings need to make a perfect seal to function at all
It's cool and alternative. Nothing has to be perfect in this imperfect world. You want to show that you are cool and that you don't care about holes.
For example:Being torn between my family and friends, I felt like I had to hide under my bed, which was as enclosed as a box.Because of my claustrophobia, I have dreams in which I was cramped and couldn't move at all; I felt like I was being trapped in a box.
Torn may be used as a verb (such as in the sentence "I have torn the paper") or as an adjective ("The paper is torn").
Time is "torn" in the duration of this book.
My dress has torn, exposing my bra.My pants have torn along the seam in the back.The insolent youngster has torn pages out of the library book.Religious zealots have torn all the nude drawings from art books.
torn