No, a metaphor is not the same as a simile (hence the different names). While both similes and metaphors are used to make comparisons, the difference between them is the word one uses when using them. Similes use the words like or as to compare things while metaphors directly state a comparison.
Answer:
Jump, kick, bath, swim, skip, walk, sing, talk, and sleep are verbs
cat, book, pond, dad, school, sister, and bed are nouns
Explanation:
Answer:
d) to tell a reader about an important historical event
In a sentence, the words <em>down the stairs </em>would be a A. prepositional phrase, since it begins with the word <em>down, </em>which is a preposition.
To me, "State" means a mindset. He's in a mode, or a mindset of confusion. He's confused. He's in a place where he doesn't know what's going on, if that makes sense. It is a Condition Of Mind
~Deceptiøn