Simile
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Simile is an Italian musical term meaning "similarly"; it indicates that the performer should continue to apply the preceding directive, whatever it was. For example, a series of dynamic changes to be repeated in many measures would make the music crowded and harder to read if written out in full, so the engraver might insert a simile directive after the first measure of the changes. The performer would then know to continue the dynamic pattern in the following measures.
A simile is a figure of speech in which the subject is compared to another subject, for example, Frequently, similes are marked by use of the words like or as, "The snow was like a blanket". However, "The snow blanketed the earth" is also a simile and not a metaphor because the verb blanketed is a shortened form of the phrase covered like a blanket.
The phrase "The snow was a blanket over the earth" is the metaphor in this case. Metaphors differ from similes in that the two objects are not compared, but treated as identical, "We are but a moment's sunlight, fading in the grass."
See also tertium comparationis.
List of notable similes
- Suspicion climbed all over her face, like a kitten, but not so playfully —Raymond Chandler
- Love is like the devil; whom it has in its clutches it surrounds with flames —Honoré de Balzac
- Exuding good will like a mortician's convention in a plague year —Daniel Berrigan
- Guiltless forever, like a tree —Robert Browning
- Idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- As good as gold —Charles Dickens
- Yellow butterflies flickered along the shade like flecks of sun —William Faulkner
- Woo the moon like the tide —Vladimir Mayakovsky
- Death has many times invited me: it was like the salt invisible in the waves —Pablo Neruda
- Solitude...is like Spanish moss which finally suffocates the tree it hangs on —Anaďs Nin
- Jubilant as a flag unfurled —Dorothy Parker
- Wide sleeves fluttering like wings —Marcel Proust
- Death lies on her, like an untimely frost —William Shakespeare
- The trees wavered their stark shadows across the snow like supplicating arms —Leo Tolstoy
- A mouth drawn in like a miser's purse —Émile Zola
- A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle; Irina Dunn, 1970de:Gleichnis