4: The phrase "like bees' is a
a. Metaphor b. Simile c. Onomatopoeia
Answers
Answered by
1
Answer:
Simile
Explanation:
Simile
Because if we used like in the sentence it is called as simile...
For example - you are so sweet as like a candy....
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Answered by
1
Answer:
a). metaphor
Explanation:
The trick to spotting is this:—
- He was a busy bee.
It’s not saying he was like a busy bee (which would then be a simile). The statement is saying he was one.
The simile makes a comparison between two different things so as to give vividness to the description, depiction or portrayal — he was brave as a lion; he stank like a sewage tank.
A metaphor doesn’t compare — it equates two different things as being one and the same. That statement is equating him to a busy bee. He’s literally not a bee.
Example:—
- Zarathustra’s words were like thunder to the people. — (Simile)
- Zarathustra’s words were thunder to the people. — (Metaphor)
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