journo$524664$ - définition. Qu'est-ce que journo$524664$
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est journo$524664$ - définition

FIGURE OF SPEECH INDICATING A SIMILARITY EXPLICITLY,E.G. USING "LIKE" OR "AS", CONTRASTING TO METAPHOR IN WHICH THE SIMILARITY IS IMPLICIT, E.G. OF THE FORM "A IS B"
Similes; Similie; Journo-simile; Similies; Happy as Larry

journo         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
¦ noun (plural journos) informal a journalist.
newspaperman         
PERSON WHO COLLECTS, WRITES AND DISTRIBUTES NEWS AND OTHER INFORMATION
Reporter; Reporters; News reporter; Juornalist; Political journalists; Broadcast Journalist; Newspaperman; Newsman; Newsmonger; Journos; Special correspondent; Newspaperwoman; Newspaper reporter; Newswriter; Press reporter; Journalists; Media reporter; Newspaper journalist; News Reporter; Staff reporter; News-monger; Journalistic freedom
(newspapermen)
A newspaperman is a journalist, especially a man, who works for a newspaper. (JOURNALISM)
= newsman
N-COUNT
newsman         
PERSON WHO COLLECTS, WRITES AND DISTRIBUTES NEWS AND OTHER INFORMATION
Reporter; Reporters; News reporter; Juornalist; Political journalists; Broadcast Journalist; Newspaperman; Newsman; Newsmonger; Journos; Special correspondent; Newspaperwoman; Newspaper reporter; Newswriter; Press reporter; Journalists; Media reporter; Newspaper journalist; News Reporter; Staff reporter; News-monger; Journalistic freedom
(newsmen)
A newsman is a journalist for a newspaper or for a television or radio news programme. (JOURNALISM)
N-COUNT

Wikipédia

Simile

A simile () is a figure of speech that directly compares two things. Similes differ from metaphors by highlighting the similarities between two things using comparison words such as "like", "as", "so", or "than", while metaphors create an implicit comparison (i.e. saying something "is" something else). This distinction is evident in the etymology of the words: simile derives from the Latin word similis ("similar, like"), while metaphor derives from the Greek word metapherein ("to transfer"). As in the case of metaphors, the thing that is being compared is called the tenor, and the thing it is being compared to is called the vehicle. Author and lexicographer Frank J. Wilstach compiled a dictionary of similes in 1916, with a second edition in 1924.