Word Game: Similes
A few weeks ago, I blogged about an alphabet game I found in a book published in 1940 called The Fun Encyclopedia. My father passed this book to me, and with it another book (which my grandfather originally owned) called The Complete Book of Games by Clement Wood and Gloria Goddard, which also came out a whopping 72 years ago.
The red binding is cracked, the pages are a yellowish-tan, and some of the games are outdated (for instance, one about sending telegrams). However, there are still some gems in this treasured gift.
Here’s another Amaze-ing Words Wednesday treat! A word game based on similes. In fact, this is the party game played in The Christmas Carol (1984) by guests at the party hosted by Ebenezer Scrooge’s nephew. (In fact, the one simile I found in Dickens’s original novella was the sentence “Old Marley was as dead as a door-nail.”)
So the rules are simply this. A simile is presented. (Random House Dictionary defines a simile as “a figure of speech in which two unlike things are explicitly compared.” The two unrelated things are connected by the words “as,” “like,” or “than.”) The adjective is stated, but you must fill in the comparative noun, and the word “as” is always used. An example (which you should all know if you listened to Foreigner): Cold as _____. [ice]
Now let’s see how you do with the following similes from The Complete Book of Games (1940):
- Black as ____________.
- Blind as a ___________.
- Busy as a ___________.
- Clean as a __________.
- Clear as ___________.
- Dry as a ___________.
- Fit as a ____________.
- Flat as a ___________.
- Good as ___________.
- Light as a __________.
- Mad as a __________.
- Neat as a __________.
- Pretty as a _________.
- Quick as __________.
- Sharp as a _________.
- Slow as __________.
- Stiff as a __________.
- Thick as __________.
- Ugly as ___________.
- White as __________.
Answers (some have several options):
- Black as coal/night/pitch/sin.
- Blind as a bat.
- Busy as a bee.
- Clean as a whistle.
- Clear as a bell/crystal/daylight.
- Dry as a bone.
- Fit as a fiddle.
- Flat as a pancake.
- Good as gold.
- Light as a feather.
- Mad as a hatter/March hare.
- Neat as a pin.
- Pretty as a picture.
- Quick as lightning/a wink.
- Sharp as a razor (not mentioned in the book, but I’ve also heard “sharp as a tack.”)
- Slow as a tortoise/molasses in January (I would have said “turtle“; surely that counts.)
- Stiff as a board/poker.
- Thick as molasses/thieves.
- Ugly as sin.
- White as snow.
There were many more similes provided in the book. Indeed, some are outdated. For instance, has anyone ever heard the following?
- Full as a tick.
- Mean as gar broth.
- Plain as a pikestaff.
- Stupid as an ostrich.
- Safe as the Bank of England.
I hadn’t.
Similes are wonderful! They help us clarify an adjective by bringing up a visual image of something we can compare it to. There are the ones we have all heard, and the ones authors come up with on their own. It’s a lot of fun as a writer to try to come up with a simile that expresses a situation or a character’s emotion.
What are your favorite similes? How did you do on the quiz? Do you enjoy creative similes in fiction?
Julie Glover
Julie Glover loves whimsy, wit, and what-ifs, but her stories also explore real-life experiences and deep-down emotions. She believes we're stronger than we think, laughter is a necessary survival skill, and you can never own too many pairs of boots.