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Go for it..
Ryan_m_b said:"That scientist is as smart as a fox" - analogy
"She blinded me with science" - metaphor
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
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.