An explicit metaphor is a metaphor that is fully explained in great detail. Unlike an implicit metaphor, which the meaning has to be implied.
Embarrassment metaphor
An elaborate metaphor is also called a sustained metaphor. It is when a metaphor is referred to multiple times throughout a piece by the author.
hyperbole
Metaphor is a noun.
You could use "a twig".
The phrase "Paper Seeming Boy" is a metaphor because it directly compares a boy to paper without using "like" or "as" to make the comparison. It implies that the boy is fragile, thin, or insubstantial.
Its a metaphor
it is neither, it is personification
It is a metaphor.
In the book The Lord of the Flies, it is mentioned that a curtain flicks in Ralph's mind. Obviously, there is no actual curtain in Ralph's head; the metaphor is describing what he feels like when he loses his train of thought.
Implied metaphor is when it gives you the metaphor but doesn't tell what the subject is. A regular metaphor tells you the subject of it.
Oh, dude, that's like asking if a hot dog is a sandwich or not. Technically, a walking dictionary would be a metaphor because it's comparing Jeffrey to a dictionary without using "like" or "as." But hey, if you wanna get super technical, you could argue it's a simile if you say Jeffrey is like a walking dictionary. But like, who really cares, right?
Metaphor
What is a metaphor???Answer: To keep the cows in!!!!Metaphor~ meadow for??get it??? LOL
Metaphor
simile its a simile when you use "like"