In between courageous attempts[*] to get the whole tube carriage to join in singing Wonderwall late on Saturday night, a somewhat inebriated bloke drew Cathy and I into a conversation. We were required to solve an argument that he and his mate had apparently been having all day. As it turned out, we agreed with his take on things - but his mate steadfastly refused to be convinced.
So, since this it the only true way to settle an argument:
[Poll #1026597]
Please show your working in the comments.
[*] More successful than you might think. He found one other equally enthusiastic person and they got through at least two verses before they ran out of words. At one point, stopped at a station, they even got a benchful of people on the platform to join in.
So, since this it the only true way to settle an argument:
[Poll #1026597]
Please show your working in the comments.
[*] More successful than you might think. He found one other equally enthusiastic person and they got through at least two verses before they ran out of words. At one point, stopped at a station, they even got a benchful of people on the platform to join in.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-23 09:37 pm (UTC)"My love is a red, red rose" is a metaphor, cos it doesn't say 'like'.
"My love is like a red, red rose" is a simile, cos it does.
The (soberer) bloke who insisted "eat like a pig" was a metaphor sounded so convincing that I began to wonder if it was actually more complicated than "is the word 'like' involved".
no subject
Date: 2007-07-24 06:15 am (UTC)As a result, it is possible to construct slightly controversial borderline cases, such as "he and the ducks waddled along the path together". So the bloke being talked about either has a duck's walk (metaphor) or walks like a duck (simile) or possibly we shouldn't apply either term here. I don't know.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-24 09:09 am (UTC)