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Identify similes and metaphors in this educational worksheet.

Worksheet titled "Simile or Metaphor" with five sentences for identifying similes and metaphors, featuring a red book icon and 15Worksheets.com branding.

Worksheet titled "Simile or Metaphor" with five sentences for identifying similes and metaphors, featuring a red book icon and 15Worksheets.com branding.

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Show Answer Key & Explanations Step-by-step solution for: Metaphors Worksheets - 15 Worksheets Library
Let's solve the worksheet step by step. The task is to determine whether each sentence uses a simile or a metaphor.

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🔹 Definitions:


- Simile: A comparison using "like" or "as".
- Metaphor: A direct comparison that states one thing is another (no "like" or "as").

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Now, let’s analyze each sentence:

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1. He was as content as a dog with a bone.

- Uses "as...as" → This is a classic simile structure.
- Answer: simile

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2. The sun was a blazing golden ball in the sky.

- Says "the sun was a...", directly comparing it to a "golden ball".
- No "like" or "as" → This is a metaphor.
- Answer: metaphor

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3. Her lips were pink candy, her hair a golden floss.

- "Her lips were pink candy" → Directly says lips are candy.
- "her hair a golden floss" → Hair is floss.
- Both are metaphors because they use "was" and "a" to equate things directly.
- Answer: metaphor

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4. That lawyer is a real tiger in the courtroom.

- Says the lawyer is a tiger → direct comparison without "like" or "as".
- This is a metaphor (implying the lawyer is fierce or aggressive).
- Answer: metaphor

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5. She slept like she'd been put until a spell.

- Wait — this sentence seems to have a typo. It should probably be:
"She slept like she'd been put under a spell."
- Even if corrected, it uses "like" → simile.
- Comparing her sleep to being under a spell.
- Answer: simile

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Final Answers:



1. simile
2. metaphor
3. metaphor
4. metaphor
5. simile

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Explanation Summary:
- Use "like" or "as"Simile
- Direct statement ("is", "was", "were") → Metaphor

This helps students understand figurative language in writing!
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of similes metaphors worksheet.
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