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  1. A metaphor is a rhetorical figure of speech that compares two subjects without the use oflike” or “as.” Metaphor is often confused with simile, which compares two subjects by connecting them with “like” or “as” (for example: “She’s fit as a fiddle”).

  2. a word or phrase used to describe somebody/something else, in a way that is different from its normal use, in order to show that the two things have the same qualities and to make the description more powerful, for example She has a heart of stone; the use of such words and phrases.

  3. /ˈmɛɾəfɔr/ /ˈmɛtəfɔ/ IPA guide. Other forms: metaphors. If you brag that "the world's your oyster," you're using a metaphor from Shakespeare, who knew a thing or two about figures of speech. Good writers know their way around a metaphor, where you make an analogy between two things to show how one resembles the other in some way.

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