4 Metaphors for able

In that year the ablest and most dreaded of England's enemies in Africa was the Dutch General, Louis Botha, leader of the fiercest and most irreconcilable Boers, who still waged a hopeless guerrilla warfare against all the might of the British Empire.

The grounds of this policy are that women likewise are less able than men to protect themselves in the labor contract, that they are physically weak and are peculiarly exposed to certain dangers to health, that as future mothers they need protection for their own and the public welfare, and that in the period of maternity the dangers are especially great.

The architects in America seem to me to be far more able than ours, or else they have a freer hand and more money.

" "He might," conceded Mr. Hucks guardedly, "and he mightn't; and then again he might be more able than willin'.

4 Metaphors for  able