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.
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". :)
Its a metaphor
Doubles, troubles, Hubble's, bubble's,Troubles, doubles
a joke a joke can be cracked a joke can be made a joke can be told a joke can be played
it is neither, it is personification
metaphor
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.
Metaphor
Metaphor
to joke to joke to joke