It's a metaphor for sex, the parents when explaining sex to the children used peanuts rather than the birds and the bees.
Joke Teller: Knock-knock! Joke Receiver: Who's there? Joke Teller: Interrupting cow. Joke Receiver: Interrupting c-- Joke Teller: Moo!!!! :]
the answer of the joke
If this is a joke, it's a milkshake. If this is not a joke, it will be a joke - a nervous cow.
you say to MAKE a joke when you invent one but you say "do" when it is someone else's joke. Actually, nobody ever says "to do a joke" unless they have only very recently started learning English.
It is a simile as it is describing the joke as last week's breakfast rather than saying it 'is' last weeks brekfast
It's a metaphor for sex, the parents when explaining sex to the children used peanuts rather than the birds and the bees.
Its a metaphor
a joke a joke can be cracked a joke can be made a joke can be told a joke can be played
Yes it is. Reminder, similes are statements that use like or as. You can think of a Metaphor as someone stating something that is a joke and not true. I normally get hyperbole and metaphor mixed up. A hyperbole is someone saying something that is exaggerated and should not be taken seriously. Hope this helped! If you're still stuck you can always use the beautiful thing called "Google". :)
it is neither, it is personification
It is a metaphor.
Doubles, troubles, Hubble's, bubble's,Troubles, doubles
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.
to joke to joke to joke
Metaphor
Metaphor