169 Metaphors for case

My case is like yours.

How much honester would it be to say, that extreme cases are 'ipso nomine' not generalizable, therefore not the subjects of a law, which is the conclusion 'per genus singuli in genere inclusi'.

The next case you come across may be a regular cheat; but you will find it out,you'll find it out.

Cases, in grammar, are modifications that distinguish the relations of nouns or pronouns to other words.

CASES FOR HOSPITAL The house where we took tea was the "big house" of the place, old and massive, a treasure house of ancient furniture.

Stocking was the next witness, and he fared no better than had Bibby. O'Brien, catching the judge's eye, made a wry face and imperceptibly lowered his left lidon the side away from the jury, thus officially indicating that, of course, the case was a lemon but that there was nothing that could be done except to try it out to the bitter end.

Breach-of-promise cases were his peculiar aversion.

" "So you think this Parker case is a mess?"

This case, though legendary, is typicala mirror of actualityshowing how potent ideas are to alter emotions.

"The nominative case is always the agent or actor.

The dative case, or oblique object, which they governed as Saxon verbs, becomes their proper object, when taken as English prepositions; and in this also they appear to be alike.

They have reverted to the cave-dweller's protection because their civilization is so highly developed that they can throw a piece of steel weighing from eighteen to two thousand pounds anywhere from five to twenty miles with merciless accuracy, and because the flesh of man is even more tender than in the cave-dweller's time, not to mention that his brain-case is a larger target.

I have found the case to be quite the contrary.

The case of Dr. Plunkett, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh, a man whom even Protestants regarded with the utmost reverence, is the most notorious of these.

Among the debris of tins, cases, knapsacks and cartridge clips were fragments of uniforms which had been blown off Russian bodies by German shells, while on a branch above my head a shrivelled human arm dangled in the light breeze of September.

Wilson's leg still troubles him and he doesn't like to trust himself on ski; but the worst case is Evans, who is giving us serious anxiety.

The other case, also mentioned by Feuerbach, was still more distressing.

*casero* m. landlord *casi* almost *caso* m. case; *el es* the fact is *cáspita* exclam.

"The case is closed, Your Honor," he replied.

My case is a hard, a very hard oneI am quite bewildered!-I know not what to do!I have not a friend in the world that can or will help me!

THE CASE IS ADJOURNED SINE DIE.

A case less open to the objection of negative evidence, however, is that afforded by the Tetrabranchiate Cephalopoda, the forms of the shells and of the septal sutures exhibiting a certain increase of complexity in the newer genera.

When final e is dropped from the verb, the case is different; as, "Thou cutst my head off with a golden axe, And smil'st upon the stroke that murders me."Shakspeare. OBS.

"The nominative case is the actor, or subject of the verb.

My needle-case, my pin-cushion, indeed my work-basket, and all its contents, are presents which she purchased for me at this fair.

169 Metaphors for  case