One example is "it is as hot as an oven".
Another example is "he is as hot as an obese jellyfish".
One example is "it is as hot as an oven".
Another example is "he is as hot as an obese jellyfish".
as gorgeous as, as attractive as.
the hamburger was as hot as egg
Hot as the inside of a volcano
Your question makes no since man!
As hot as a carolina reaper
ice cube
they were as hot as me
simile because it has "as"
Her eyes were as cold as ice.
Ice
Do you mean: Is 'cold as ice' a metaphor or a simile? If so, it is a simile because 'cold as ice' uses as. A simile is a comparison that uses like or as. A metaphor is a comparison that DOES NOT use like or as. Hope that helps. :)
The simile in your sentence is "like roses".
on page 81 Jonas makes a simile when in the first memory the snow gathers on the back of his hands; he compares it to cold fur
No because "as cold as a boot" would be a simile - and it makes no sense anyway, because nobody thinks of a boot as something cold.A cliche would be "as cold as ice" maybe - but that's still a simile.
This is not an idiom. When you see AS ___ AS ___ you are dealing with A Simile. They are comparing the temperature to a witch's supposedly cold body.
simile
i don't know really doing college homework
No, "As ____ as ____" is always the formula for a simile, a comparison of two thing to each other.
Pluto is as cold as an icy stare from an ex-wife.