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analogy English

Meaning analogy meaning

What does analogy mean?
Definitions in simple English

analogy

An analogy is a likeness or a comparison between two things that have some features that are the same and others which are different. Several quite obvious analogies between the two authors can be made.

analogy

drawing a comparison in order to show a similarity in some respect the operation of a computer presents and interesting analogy to the working of the brain the models show by analogy how matter is built up an inference that if things agree in some respects they probably agree in others the religious belief that between creature and creator no similarity can be found so great but that the dissimilarity is always greater; any analogy between God and humans will always be inadequate

Synonyms analogy synonyms

What other words have the same or similar meaning as analogy?

Examples analogy examples

How do I use analogy in a sentence?

Simple sentences

Your analogy isn't correct.
Mary tried to explain fractions to Tom by using a pie as an analogy.
I don't understand the analogy.
Such an analogy is inappropriate in this case.

Movie subtitles

But I want to angle it to bring out the analogy. between the Faust legend and this man's story.
I borrowed my analogy. from football.
There's no analogy to this structure in Federation technology.
Your clever turn of phrase, your use of analogy and metaphor.
And there's a clear pattern here which suggests an analogy to an infectious disease process spreading from one resort area to the next.
But there the analogy ends.
A very fine analogy.
A very inept analogy, if I may say so.
Well, the jewellery, sir, I think is, if you'll forgive the analogy, only the tip of the tentacle.
Which proves what a bad analogy it was, because I'm not extinct.
The analogy refers to the worst quality of capitalists.
That may be an incorrect analogy.
If we use the analogy of a body function, what occurred.
I don't know if you understand that analogy, but it's the clearest one I can make.
Alliances between nations, as my years with the diplomatic corps have often shown, resemble - if you'll pardon the analogy - ceritain marriages.
I ask you to describe this situation using an analogy.
So, an analogy.
That's really not the analogy I would've used, but yeah, I think you're right.
Michael, your analogy is quite disturbing.
Then they cut if off. Now he's dead. I don't know if you understand that analogy, but it's the clearest one I can make.
Two times two - is two, and I can prove that by analogy, the highest of all forms of proof.
But I don't understand the analogy.
Perhaps he argued by analogy with the moon or the sun maybe he noticed the curved shadow of the Earth on the moon during a lunar eclipse.
So, by this analogy a black hole is a kind of bottomless pit.
That's not a bad analogy, but given the right conditions, Feldon is infinitely more efficient.
I have given up trying to recreate a real reflection of life in my films and, in the end, have trod the path of objective description and optical analogy, as a way of presenting one's mobile swamp of memories.
If you were referring to the first production model automobile of the 20th century perhaps the subsequent Model A would be a more apt analogy since I am Dr. Noonien Soong's revised prototype.
But you're okay with the serial killer analogy?
To make an analogy-- if it was like, say. oh, I don't know. um, cards, pinochle.
The closest analogy is. stepsister.
Weird analogy. Anyway. Even now.
What a delightful little analogy.

News and current affairs

This historical analogy, though increasingly popular, is misleading.
It is largely because the idea of common European citizenship is often understood by analogy to that of national citizenship that further European integration engenders so much fear and opposition.
President Bush recently drew an analogy between the current struggle against violent jihadi terrorism and the Cold War.
Again, an analogy with household debt readily suggests itself.
In fact, the analogy of holding victims at gunpoint is misleading, because in public decision-making we can hardly claim that everything is all right as long as we don't pull the trigger.
A more apt analogy popular in Egypt compares Mubarak to Leonid Brezhnev, who for two decades presided over the Soviet Union's stagnation and decline.
Perhaps that analogy is rather insulting to those who play roulette.
Maritain's example disproves the claim that the analogy between Christian and Muslim democracy fails.
Others believe that the only useful analogy is to Europe's old balance-of-power games.
Each analogy contains an element of truth, but none, of course, corresponds to the realities of the challenges Iran represents.
Above all, each analogy, if taken seriously, should lead to a specific course of action, and this is far from being the case today.
Let us start with the analogy between Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Hitler.
The analogy with Hitler's Germany is also problematic because, if it were regarded as true, the only sensible course of action would be a preventive strike on Iran and the removal of Ahmadinejad.
The second analogy, to the old balance-of-power system in Europe, is especially popular among Israeli and American diplomats.
If Nakasone, who now urges Koizumi to stop the Yasukuni pilgrimage, were to respond to Aso, he might simply extend the analogy: it is not in Japan's national interest to continue to inhale Koizumi's second-hand smoke.
Let us start with some simple aeronautic dynamics, using an analogy that my PIMCO colleague, Bill Gross, came up with to describe the economic risks facing the American economy.
While the US has problems, it hardly fits the description of absolute decline in ancient Rome, and the analogy to British decline, however popular, is similarly misleading.
But the best analogy for Tunisia today is Spain in the years preceding and following the death of Francisco Franco.
The best way to understand the current situation comes from an analogy offered by former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
But Bush missed another lesson implicit in his analogy: the importance of using the soft power of culture.
A sea-faring analogy simplifies some of the complexity.

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