From a book jacket blurb about Tess Gallagher’s ability to portray aging people’s vision of irremediable loss in novel, The Lovers of Horses.
One could compile a small book of just “Clear as” similes. The bell comparison along with “Clear as a whistle” and “Clear as crystal” are probably most frequently used and familiar.
“Clear as” comparisons linked with the day, time of day, and the sun at different times of the day include “Clear as noon” (shortened from the once popular “Clear as noon-day”) and “Clear as the sun” (both attributed to Roger North); “Clear as is the summer’s sun” (William Shakespeare); “Clear as the mid-day sunshine” (Nathaniel Hawthorne); “Clear as daylight” (Arnold Bennett).
Noun | 1. | clarity - free from obscurity and easy to understand; the comprehensibility of clear expression comprehensibility, understandability - the quality of comprehensible language or thought monosemy - having a single meaning (absence of ambiguity) usually of individual words or phrases focus - maximum clarity or distinctness of an idea; "the controversy brought clearly into focus an important difference of opinion" clearcutness, preciseness - clarity as a consequence of precision unambiguity, unequivocalness - clarity achieved by the avoidance of ambiguity explicitness - clarity as a consequence of being explicit abstruseness, obscurity, reconditeness, obscureness - the quality of being unclear or abstruse and hard to understand |
2. | ![]() visibility - capability of providing a clear unobstructed view; "a windshield with good visibility" distinctness, sharpness - the quality of being sharp and clear quality - an essential and distinguishing attribute of something or someone; "the quality of mercy is not strained"--Shakespeare opaqueness, opacity - the quality of being opaque to a degree; the degree to which something reduces the passage of light |