Asked by Mr.Brain

“Her coffee-and-cream neck” is an example of what type of figurative language?

personification
symbol
simile
metaphor

Answers

Answered by Ms. Sue
I'll be glad to check your answer.
Answered by Mr.Brain
ok i think its a simile
Answered by Ms. Sue
But a simile must use "like" or "as." This cannot be a simile.

Answered by Writeacher
Did you even bother to look up terms at the answers.com link I gave you?
Answered by Mr.Brain
can you help i don't know the answer
Answered by Ms. Sue
What better help is there than encouraging you to use a dictionary??

You certainly don't want someone <i>giving</i> you the answer, do you??
Answered by Swag
I would say its a metaphor... Why well because the figure of speech is relating to an object as in her coffe, and cream neck. AM i right?
Answered by Swag
hello?? am i right?
Answered by Youngswagger
I need help on the same question.Can someone help,plz??I know it can't be a simile because it has it have 'like' or 'as' in the sentence and it don't.That pretty much all I know.someone plz help me.
Answered by lovelybri
i think it may be metaphor
Answered by Ava
It is a metaphor I just did that quick check :D
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