21 Metaphors for billies

"Them Silly Billies is the deceitfulest chaps as is.

Billy was such a gentle, lovable, little dog, that he was a favorite with every one in the house.

Billy was a good and faithful servant and his master appreciated the fact.

Charming Billy was not by nature a diplomat; it never once occurred to him that he would better treat Mama Joy as if that half minute in the kitchen had never been.

Mrs. Haggage he knew slightly; and Kathleen Saumarez he had known very well indeed, some six years previously, before she had ever heard of Miguel Saumarez, and when Billy was still an undergraduate.

A case occurred in our neighborhood while Billy was a puppy.

Billy was such a nice boy, you know.

To the foreign colony it became evident that, in the side of President Ham, Billy was a thorn, sharp, irritating, virulent, and that at any moment Ham might pluck that thorn and Billy would leave Hayti in haste, and probably in handcuffs.

Outside, the dog was barking spasmodically; but Billy, being a product of the cattle industry pure and simple, knew not the way of dogs.

" Billy suddenly felt the instinct of the champion.

Accordingly by an executive order Billy became an employee of the government.

Kennaston she pitied a little; but his bearing toward her ranged ludicrously from that of proprietorship to that of supplication, and, moreover, she was furious with him for having hinted at various times that Billy was a fortune-hunter.

"] Charming Billy, fumbling the latigo absently, felt a sudden belligerence toward her father.

We ought to mention that Billy was a great favourite with his mistress; and perhaps he had won her heart by the care and attention he had bestowed at every spare moment on one of her little ones, who was a very sickly, fretful child, but who, somehow or other, was always most quickly pacified by Billy.

Billy was as good as gold, a fat fellow with yellow hair and a red face, full of ingenious devices, stanch in his friendship, and as fond of fun as of eating, in which last field he was eminently great.

Billy was Washington's valet and huntsman and served with him throughout the Revolution as a body servant, rode with him at reviews and was painted by Savage in the well-known group of the President and his family.

Billy was an Englishman from Durham County, having attended school in Barnard's Castle three years, with an additional two and a half years spent at the agricultural college in Darlington.

Billy's a millionaire, and I'm a pauper.

(Billy is my sister's baby.)

Billy's the other shuvver, besides me.

Billy's a man, I tell youworth a dozen of your Kennastons and Charterises.

21 Metaphors for  billies