1. When the pomegranates are ripe, they split their mouths one by one, some burst like fried broad beans, and some pursed their mouths and smiled like shy little girls.
2. Pomegranate looks like a spherical vase with a small mouth, and its skin is yellow-brown. When it is exploded, crystal clear fruits are arranged neatly, layer after layer, as if it were a treasure chest full of rubies.
3. The round pomegranate is like a baby face, and its mouth is cracked with laughter. The glittering pomegranate seeds are like sparkling gems and teeth in a baby's mouth.
Extended information:
Figurative rhetoric:
1. Definition
Metaphor is "analogy". It is a rhetorical device that compares one thing with another according to the similarities between two different things.
2. Structure
Metaphor generally consists of three parts, namely, ontology (the thing or situation being compared), vehicle (the thing or situation being used as metaphor) and figurative words (the symbolic words of figurative relationship).
3. The purpose of metaphor
Metaphor aims to clarify ideas in vivid language. That is, through metaphor, people can know and understand things that they don't understand, don't understand, don't know and don't know.
Therefore, it is necessary to use things that people are familiar with as metaphors to compare things that people are unfamiliar with (noumenon), so that people can know things that they didn't know originally. Never use things that people are unfamiliar with to compare things that people are familiar with, let alone things that people don't know to compare things that people don't know. Then it is counterproductive and counterproductive.