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brush

(53,737 posts)
8. Why remove them from the curriculum? They are what they are, parts of....
Tue Nov 5, 2019, 01:07 PM
Nov 2019

Last edited Tue Nov 5, 2019, 01:59 PM - Edit history (1)

language, great for visualization and can make excellent thread posts.

For instance: She was like a boss as she drop-kicked him in his big, orange ass.

Or: She was a boss as she stood and pointed at him and said everything about you comes back to Russia.

We have excellent material for them squatting in the WH.

I'm a writer wryter2000 Nov 2019 #1
A metaphor is a type of similie, I think. Mike 03 Nov 2019 #2
A simile uses "like" or "as" BlueMTexpat Nov 2019 #11
A metaphor compares two dissimilar things by linking them with a commonality. TheBlackAdder Nov 2019 #23
I'm like wow! wasupaloopa Nov 2019 #26
... BlueMTexpat Nov 2019 #30
Your post resembles the textbook definition ProudLib72 Nov 2019 #33
Yes, it does. BlueMTexpat Nov 2019 #41
Metaphor if figurative and simile is literal (kind of--it doesn't pretend one is the other). Cuthbert Allgood Nov 2019 #18
Do they teach either? LisaM Nov 2019 #3
Ugh. Act_of_Reparation Nov 2019 #22
Ugh, whatever? LisaM Nov 2019 #39
Nuance. Act_of_Reparation Nov 2019 #42
Who remembers if you don't use it exboyfil Nov 2019 #4
Some people insist that writing cursive is faster than lettering. Mariana Nov 2019 #9
I use a combo of print and cursive to write faster. Claritie Pixie Nov 2019 #10
Luckily we have the internets so we don't have to remember anything anymore underpants Nov 2019 #5
Well, I'm a fiction writer, and I think the difference is unimportant-- dawg day Nov 2019 #6
I also find the old metaphors and sayings interesting, rusty fender Nov 2019 #13
I always thought it was from football, but that's 10 yards! dawg day Nov 2019 #28
I thought the same thing about a bolt of material rusty fender Nov 2019 #32
Hell, rownesheck Nov 2019 #7
Spelling-- have her pay attention to words as she reads- dawg day Nov 2019 #31
I've always been a good speller rownesheck Nov 2019 #36
Same here-- it was third grade, and I put an extra "t" in monument. dawg day Nov 2019 #38
Why remove them from the curriculum? They are what they are, parts of.... brush Nov 2019 #8
Knowing how to write cursive is like knowing how to use an astrolabe. DavidDvorkin Nov 2019 #12
Maybe, but what about knowing how to read it? E.g., parents/grandparents letters? nt LAS14 Nov 2019 #15
I'm a grandparent DavidDvorkin Nov 2019 #17
And you think no other grandparents write letters in cursive? nt LAS14 Nov 2019 #20
I assume so DavidDvorkin Nov 2019 #21
For me what matters these days is that a person can learn anything they want to online. abqtommy Nov 2019 #14
Without schooling, how do they know what to wonder about? nt LAS14 Nov 2019 #16
Wonder and curiosity are not the provenance of any educaitonal system. I used to irritate abqtommy Nov 2019 #34
I look at it this way: It's like.... lagomorph777 Nov 2019 #19
Pretty sure I learned it in 7th grade (or earlier) Ms. Toad Nov 2019 #24
Yeah, but "educated." That still is true in this country. We were being given... LAS14 Nov 2019 #25
Say what? Goodheart Nov 2019 #27
I'm a writer too and there can be vast differences. nolabear Nov 2019 #29
I just taught it to my seventh graders last week ProudLib72 Nov 2019 #35
It's such a simple distinction. High school teachers make much of it. skip fox Nov 2019 #37
A simile is like a smile, but MineralMan Nov 2019 #40
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