What's the difference between an analogy and a metaphor?

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The discussion centers on the distinctions between analogy, metaphor, and simile. An analogy is described as a comparison where one thing is likened to another, often for illustrative purposes, such as "That scientist is as smart as a fox." A metaphor, on the other hand, conveys meaning by stating one thing is another, exemplified by "She blinded me with science." Similes are highlighted as direct comparisons using "like" or "as," such as "This drink is as cold as ice," which is considered a straightforward comparison rather than a figurative expression. The conversation emphasizes that similes and metaphors serve different functions in language, with similes requiring a more direct comparison and metaphors creating new meanings by equating two unlike things.
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Nice Job, Ryan. I like that.
 
To be a little bit more helpful as I understand it analogy is when one says that X is like Y (even if Y doesn't necessarily possesses the trait in question, it's usually poetic) whereas metaphor is when you use a term that has a different meaning to convey the point. E.g.

"That scientist is as smart as a fox" - analogy

"She blinded me with science" - metaphor

And for an added bonus

"This drink is as cold as ice" - simile, which is similar to an analogy but is more of a direct comparison rather than a figure of speech
 
Ryan_m_b said:
"That scientist is as smart as a fox" - analogy

"She blinded me with science" - metaphor

Would both be metaphors, well the first is actually a simile. And everyone knows foxes are cunning!
Analogies are extended metaphors, to convey a specific point. If it's just a figure of speech it doesn't really qualify.

An interesting question though. I've never really given it any thought before.
 
Ryan_m_b said:
To be a little bit more helpful as I understand it analogy is when one says that X is like Y (even if Y doesn't necessarily possesses the trait in question, it's usually poetic) whereas metaphor is when you use a term that has a different meaning to convey the point. E.g.

"That scientist is as smart as a fox" - analogy

"She blinded me with science" - metaphor

And for an added bonus

"This drink is as cold as ice" - simile, which is similar to an analogy but is more of a direct comparison rather than a figure of speech

I don't think that works for a simile does it? It's not novel, drink's can actually be cold. You have to create new meaning with a simile.
 
Pythagorean said:
I don't think that works for a simile does it? It's not novel, drink's can actually be cold. You have to create new meaning with a simile.
wiki said:
A simile is a figure of speech that directly compares two different things, usually by employing the words "like" or "as" – also, but less commonly, "if", or "than". A simile differs from a metaphor in that the latter compares two unlike things by saying that the one thing is the other thing.

I think you're right. In saying, "This beer is as cold as ice." you are saying the physical temperature of one thing is the same as the physical temperature of another. Two different things aren't being compared. See the difference if you say, "The killer was as cold as ice." There, you're referring to his lack of human emotional responsiveness and comparing it to a physically low temperature. Two different things being compared.

To turn this into a metaphor we'd simply assert the killer was the thing we're comparing him to: "The killer was a block of ice."
 

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