12 Metaphors for barker

Mr. Barker is a resident of New Orleans.

"Anyways, if this ain't torment, and if Barker ain't Beelzebub himself, I'm a liar.

John Barker, R.N., was a local character, a coal merchant and a man with a grievance.

Barker was his agent.

He merely remembered the fact that Barker was a steady patron of the pool-room near the Union Station, and filed it away with his other threads of information concerning the murder.

That being the case, and Barker being obviously not a high type of man, it is certainly not unreasonable to presume that he was capitalizing his information." "Seems plausible," grunted Leverage.

Francis Barker had been the negro slave of Bathurst's father, who left him his liberty by will.

Barker, is that a spot o' rust on that pillar-chain, or is my eyesight deceiving me?

"You see, Williams," said Russell, "Barker is an enormously strong fellow, and that makes the younger chaps, whom he fags, look up to him as a great hero.

William Barker was not a large man; neither was he small.

Sergeant Barker was the ideal Cavalryman and the ideal breaker of hearts,hearts of the Mary-Ann and Eliza-Jane order.

Barker became an important member of Johnson's family, some of whom reproached him for his liberality to the nigger.

12 Metaphors for  barker