What is a Simile?

A simile is a figure of speech consisting of a comparison using like or as. Well-chosen ones can be used to enliven writing or as an alternative to description using adjectives, for example. Some refer to a universal, or nearly so, quality or attribute of the object of comparison.
Examples include the following:     As white as snow     As old as the hills

It is also possible for these figures of speech to refer to a characteristic that is possible but not necessary:     As high as a kiteKites are not always being flown, so they are not always high, but flying is what kites are made for and being “up in the sky” is closely associated with them. Even though they are not quite as obvious, such similes are readily understood.

Similes can also be sarcastic:     As clear as mud.This is not intended to be understood in a straightforward way; it means, in fact, the opposite of what it says.

Some comparisons expressed this way tend toward the figurative:     As dead as a doornailhas been explained in several different ways: as deriving from the practice of bending back doornails so that they could not be salvaged, or possibly from the use of doornails as early doorknockers, dead to the “abuse” they received as they were knocked. In any case, doornails are not literally dead, having never actually been alive.

Another figurative use is the following:     As dead as a dodobecause, technically, dodos aren’t dead, but extinct.
Alliteration may play a role in these as well, because a pattern can certainly be seen:     As clear as crystal     As dry as dust     As busy as a bee     As proud as a peacock     As pleased as Punch     As large as life     As pretty as a picture     As cool as a cucumber     As dull as dishwater     As hot as hell     As fit as a fiddle     As slow as a snail

Similes start off as fresh, interesting language, but like any other phrase, when too often repeated, they become clichés. Most of the color comparisons and animal comparisons have lost their verve, for example. Instead of brightening up language, they now make it boring. It’s not enough to sprinkle one’s language with these figures of speech to enliven it — it’s also necessary to choose well.