
December 16, 2024
What is an epithet?
If you’ve ever visited the Big Apple or heard the Good Word, you’ve encountered epithets. See epithet examples and their types.
Learn moreSometimes, drawing a comparison is the best, or only, way to convey an idea to your audience. Similes and metaphors gift writers with two creative methods to compare one thing to another thing. Learn the difference between a simile and a metaphor and how to use both effectively in your work.
Similes grant writers the opportunity to compare two things using the words “like” or “as.” You use similes to create vivid imagery or to describe an abstract concept in a way your audience will catch onto more easily. Check out these examples of similes to wrap your head around them better:
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Learn moreTo write a simile yourself, start with one of these two basic structures:
Play around with comparing one thing to another thing and explore how it elevates your writing. You may surprise yourself with the profound ideas you come up with.
A metaphor also compares one thing to another, but where a simile declares something is like another, a metaphor declares something is another. As a form of figurative language, you don’t take metaphors literally. Metaphors require an audience to take a wider mental leap than similes do because you state one thing is another, but when done properly, audiences love it.
Don’t confuse metaphor with allegory. A metaphor is a sentence or short segment that equates two things as the same. Allegory, on the other hand, is a complete narrative that seems to be about one thing on the surface but contains some other meaning beneath.
Look through these examples for a clearer picture of metaphors:
There’s no clear formula to follow when writing a metaphor, so you may find them trickier to write than similes. To try it out, brainstorm the type of mood or comparison you want to make with a given subject. Freely associate words related to that mood, theme, or message. Finally, play around with writing [subject] is [comparison] and roll with it to see what you come up with. Read it out loud to determine if it works or just sounds silly. You’ll know a powerful metaphor when you find it.
The biggest difference between similes and metaphors is the scale. You generally use similes for quick comparisons to illustrate a point, and you generally use metaphors to evoke powerful emotions.
Take the song Wind Beneath My Wings sung by Bette Midler. The lyrics compare someone being the support for someone else’s success to being akin to an invisible wind that lifts an eagle high into the air. The main chorus goes:
“I could fly higher than an eagle, for you are the wind beneath my wings.”
And it’s powerful. The imagery makes it powerful, and the use of metaphor makes it powerful. Think of how the lyrics would read if it was written as simile instead,
“I could fly higher than an eagle, for you’re like the wind beneath my wings.”
The message remains, but the impact weakens.
Let’s turn to a completely different song with similar lyrics but done in simile: Fly Like an Eagle written by Steve Miller Band, and later covered by Seal. The main chorus goes:
“I want to fly like an eagle, to the sea, Fly like and eagle, let my spirit carry me.”
In this song, using simile works perfectly whereas metaphor would not.
Next time you sit down at the keyboard to write, play around with metaphors and similes and see what works and what doesn’t.
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