We have a storage room, we have a wheat barrel. We smell Axe deodorant.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
sweeter than sap from a tree. Tangier than the juice from a nectarine.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
the heat she’s experiencing.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
So is she really black matter? No, but that’s how she’s feeling at the present. Are her palms really hot coals? No, but, again, those are things she’s experienced, so that’s how she’s describing
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
My palms are two hot coals, scalding.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
These are some examples of similes. How about metaphor now? I’m black matter smeared in the hardwood. Stubble left on the maroon carpeting
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softer than I imagined. Like river water depositing pebbles on the quais.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
—like dandelions in a breeze.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
She doesn’t know what to make of him, so she relates these emotions that she’s unaccustomed to feeling to things she does understand. This method works well for many protagonists who are experiencing love for the first time. Watch for the similes in the following section (the use of “like” or “as”) where Tempeste likens what she’s feeling to something concrete from her past.
Menna Abu Zahramembuat kutipan4 tahun yang lalu
it’s unsurprising that our main character experiences conflicting emotions.