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simile

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simile

Figure of speech that in English uses the conjunctions like and as to express the comparison between two different things (‘run like the devil’; ‘as deaf as a post’). It is sometimes confused with metaphor. The simile makes an explicit comparison (suggesting that something is like something else), while a metaphor's comparison is implicit (suggesting that something is something else).

Not all comparisons using the words like or as are similes; for example, ‘the city of Bristol is like Boston’ literally compares two cities. However, in ‘the city of Bristol is like a fine old ship’ or ‘the city of Boston is like a fine old lady’, more imaginative comparisons are made, not city with city, but city with ship or lady. These analogical links between less obvious contexts are similes.

simile

In musical notation, directing the musician to continue performing a previously notated indication. For example, if the first few bars of a piece are marked staccato (detached) a composer may simply write simile rather than continue to mark individual staccato dots.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
The sagacious reader will not from this simile imagine these poor people had any apprehension of the design with which Mrs Wilkins was now coming towards them; but as the great beauty of the simile may possibly sleep these hundred years, till some future commentator shall take this work in hand, I think proper to lend the reader a little assistance in this place.
the tree at whose foot I lay had opened its rocky side, and in the cleft, like a long lily-bud sliding from its green sheath, stood a dryad, and my speech failed and my breath went as I looked upon her beauty, for which mortality has no simile.
He had never before seen a woman's lips and teeth which forced upon his mind with such persistent iteration the old Elizabethan simile of roses filled with snow.
 
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