A train.
The whole speech is one big extended metaphor. "All the world's a stage . . .", well like a stage anyway. Which is why this is a metaphor.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is one that stretches longer than a single sentence. A regular metaphor would be something like "She was a rock, unchanging." An extended metaphor would expand on that idea.
An extended metaphor is a metaphor that is developed throughout a piece of writing or speech. For example, in Shakespeare's "All the world's a stage" speech from "As You Like It," he compares life to a play, with different "acts" representing different stages of life. This extended metaphor helps to convey the idea that life is like a performance with different roles and scenes.
An extended metaphor is a metaphor that is continued into the next sentence and throughout a section of text. Several poems use extended metaphors and Shakespeare and Frost used it in their pieces.
Most metaphors are said in a single phrase or sentence as in "My love is a red, red rose." If you went on to explain how she like the rose has beauty, a pleasing scent, but hidden thorns in a full paragraph or an entire essay, then we would say you have an extended metaphor.
A poem is a poem it has a name for a reason it may contain metaphors or personification so can it be called extended personification ? Well probably only if you have personification in it then call it what ever you want
a metaphor uses like or as
This statement is a metaphor. It is comparing seasons to celebrations without using "like" or "as."
No, it is not a metaphor because it uses like or as.
A metaphor, a simile uses the words like or as.
this is not a metaphor because it's not suppose to have like in it. so this is a simile not a metaphor.