English, asked by 7b42aarya, 3 months ago

Yellow as honey, red as wine. (Identify the Figure of Speech) *​


shraddha24780: it is similes..

Answers

Answered by harmeetkaurrana642
30

Answer:

Yellow is compared to honey and red is to wine. The poet uses hyperbole for exaggeration, and for glorifying his dream. “The evening lamp would shine, yellow as honey red as wine.” Here, the poet exaggerates the colors of light.

Answered by steffiaspinno
1

Simile

  • Figures of speech are an essential component of any language.
  • It is used only in written and spoken literature.
  • The phrase has a different literal meaning than it does in the context.

Figures of speech come in a variety of shapes and sizes.

Personification:

It imbues inanimate or abstract objects with human traits.  

Example:

My bicycle is a thing of beauty.

Metaphor:

It compares two different items that share a characteristic.  

Example:

He is the industry's biggest star.

Simile:

It compares two things that have similar characteristics.  

Example:

He is as brave as a tiger.

Alliteration:

A series of words will have the same consonant sound at the beginning of the sentence.  

Example:

Baked beans from Boston.

Hyperbole:

It is made up of words that are exaggerated.

Example:

You are more beautiful than the rainbow colours.

Euphemism:

It refers to the use of gentle words rather than harsh or unpleasant ones.  

Example:

She's telling us a fairy tale.

Irony:

It is the use of words to express a meaning that is opposed to the actual meaning.  

Example:

You are as sweet as poison.

Anaphora:

It's a word-for-word repetition.

Example:

He has one watch, one shirt, and one jacket.

Apostrophe:

It depicts a work that was not part of the original.

Example:

The girl's mother loved her.

"Yellow as honey, red as wine."

The figure of speech- simile

The word 'as' is used to compare things.

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