Metaphor
Yes
She sobbed as if she were a mere child and lost in a new city.
yes, if the sentence uses "like" or "as" then it is a simile.
Not necessarily. The metaphor "eyes were like lamps turned on" can convey a sense of brightness, alertness, or intensity in someone's gaze. It may indicate a strong emotion or presence, but not necessarily crying.
There's only one way a blood-clot can cry....what's crying? when you cry from your eyes you leak out tears....so if your blood-clot is crying....It must leak out blood, metaphor you know...
i think its personification
If an author describes monsoon raining as " the sky is crying", here author is explaining rain by using metaphor as " the sky is crying." A few more examples are: "Your eyes are the sun in my life." "Your smile brightens the entire room." "The cat was a ball of fluffiness." It means that the object or person is described as something else without using the words 'like' or 'as.'
"The flood of emotions overwhelmed her, leaving her feeling lost in a sea of confusion."
Rain being used in a metaphor is common and an easy metaphor. Here is one of the more popular or common metaphors used relating to 'rain'. If you were describing a sad person you could take the sentence, "She cried," and switch it around. You first should start small with a simile; "When she cried it was like rain." Then make it a metaphor and as you know a metaphor does not use 'like' or 'as'. "Her crying was rain," or something similar pertaining to rain or perhaps other weather conditions. Using 'rain' as a metaphor is quite easy plus you can explore the other weather metaphors!
No, "clear crystal day" is not a metaphor. It is a literal description of a day with clear skies and good visibility. Metaphors are figures of speech that imply a comparison between two unrelated things.
A crying baby is like a tiny storm cloud, releasing torrents of rain that signal distress and longing. Each wail is a thunderclap, echoing the need for comfort and care. In that moment, the world pauses, waiting for the sun to break through the clouds once more.
Yes, that is a metaphor. When someone says, "She cried crocodile tears," it's a metaphor, but if they were to say, "Hers were like crocodile tears," or "Her tears were as big as a crocodile's," then it would be a simile.