About Metaphor Maker
Metaphor Maker creates original, evocative metaphors and similes for whatever concept you give it — useful for writers stuck on a description, teachers explaining a hard concept, speakers crafting a memorable line, or anyone tired of "like a deer in headlights."
Who this tool is for
- Novelists and short-story writers stuck on a description that won't come alive
- Teachers explaining quantum physics, economics, or grammar to skeptical teens
- Keynote speakers and TED-talk prep crews crafting the one line people quote
- Songwriters and poets digging for fresh imagery to replace tired tropes
- Marketing copywriters whose tagline needs a comparison that lands
Real use cases
- Find a metaphor for grief that doesn't lean on "waves" or "shadows"
- Explain compound interest to a 16-year-old using something other than a snowball
- Build the closing image of your TED talk so it sticks after the audience walks out
- Generate 10 metaphors for "starting over" then pick the one that fits your character
- Find a fresh way to describe your product without saying "game-changer"
How to use Metaphor Maker
- Enter the concept clearly — "loneliness in a big city," not just "loneliness"
- Pick form: Metaphor (X is Y), Simile (X is like Y), Extended (a full paragraph)
- Set tone: Literary, Conversational, Funny, Scientific, Poetic
- Add context — "for a YA novel," "for a sermon," "for a tech keynote" — to nail register
- Ask for 10+ and then follow up: "expand #4 into three sentences"
Tips for better results
- Strong metaphors compare across distant categories — feelings to weather, ideas to architecture
- If the metaphor needs explaining, it isn't working yet. Try a different vehicle
- For speeches, the metaphor that makes the room go quiet is the right one — test live if you can
- Don't mix metaphors in the same paragraph. Pick one and let it breathe
Frequently asked questions
How is a metaphor different from a simile?
A simile uses "like" or "as" — her smile was like sunrise. A metaphor states it outright — her smile was sunrise. Metaphors hit harder; similes are gentler.
Are these metaphors original?
The model produces fresh combinations each time, but for high-stakes use (a published book, a viral keynote line) Google the metaphor to make sure it isn't already a famous quote.
When should I avoid metaphor entirely?
Technical documentation, legal text, and instructions. If a reader needs precise meaning, plain language wins. Metaphor is for moments where emotion or memory matters more than literal clarity.