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Figures of speech

Simile

An explicit connection between two realities using a comparison word: like, as, similar to.

A simile connects a tenor (what you're talking about) and a vehicle (the image) through an explicit grammatical tool: "like," "as," "similar to." Unlike metaphor, it keeps the two realities distinct — the reader sees the bridge between the banks instead of leaping straight across.

That explicitness makes it gentler and more controllable than metaphor: you guide the reader. It's also its limit — a stock simile ("white as snow") slides by without a trace. A simile's quality almost always lies in the choice of vehicle: concrete, sensory, slightly unexpected.

Example

"O my Luve is like a red, red rose / That's newly sprung in June"

Robert Burns, "A Red, Red Rose"

In the workshop

Ban the frozen similes of everyday speech. If your vehicle could appear in an idiom dictionary, find another one.

Put it into practice

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