no it is not a simally u have to have like or as in the sentence to make it a smlie.
example: you are as fast as a cheetah
example: run like the wind
a simile for a cloudy winter day
No, A Simile uses AS (or like) to make a comparison. For example, "It was raining as much as it did in Noah's time."
This is a simile because it uses the word "like" or "as" to compare the pillow to a cloud. Similes make comparisons using "like" or "as," while metaphors make direct comparisons without using such words.
No it doesn't
i didnt come here to answer questions i came here to see the answer for the question no duh
Simile can be used in poetry to make things come together or rhyme.
LIke snowflakes on a wintery day.
A simile.
A simile is a comparison between two things that usually employs the use of "like, than, or as." Here is a simile using the woA simile is a comparison that employs the use of "like, than, or as." Here is a simile using the word "restaurant" as asked in the question: Stan was as busy as a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day. Stan was busier than a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day. Stan hurried like the staff at a high-class restaurant on Mother's Day.
Yes, there is a simile in Sonnet 29 by William Shakespeare. The line "Like to the lark at break of day arising" contains a simile comparing the speaker's mood to a lark ascending in the morning.
The key in this sentence to determining that it IS a Simile, is the word LIKE.The format: something is LIKE something else. Makes it a Simile.
to make the nubers simile