Can anyone trasform it to metaphors and use them in complete sentence?
Polly used them as similies. In order to make them metaphors, you have to remove the “like” or “as” and make a direct comparison. 1. She gracefully placed herself upon the chair – a feather gliding onto a cushion. 2. After skipping lunch, he was a voracious wolf when he sat at the dinner table. 3. She was a busy bee preparing for the evening’s party. 4. He displayed his peacock plumes as he watched his daughter accept her award at graduation. 5. She realized she had broken curfew and entered the house quietly, a mouse avoiding detection of the vicious cat waiting to pounce. 6. She might be skinny, but when it comes to lifting heavy laundry baskets, she’s an ox. 7. Mary is so stubborn, I could dangle a carrot right in her face and that mule wouldn’t budge. 8. He’s a lion protecting his cub when boys come to call for his daughter. 9. (Tough one because there’s really no direct comparison to use. This is more of an idiom.) He was born when that hill was just a mound of sand. 10. Her eyes