10 Metaphors for cheers

Cheer her up with a lively letter, not a peevish one," was Jarvis's advice.

(Loud cheers and singing "For he's a jolly Shortfellow.") Mr. SHORTER'S main purpose is to meet the best American minds in friendly intercourse and thus to promote Britannico-Columbian amity and an even freer interchange of ideas than the theatre now ensures.

A loud cheer from the ranks was the reply.

In the account of the Spanish invasion, by the Saltzburg preachers at Ebenezer, are these very just reflections: "Cheering was the intelligence that the Spaniards, with all their ships of war and numerous military force, had raised the siege in shame and disgrace, and retired to Augustine!

" The cheers that greeted this were the loudest yet.

He cheered himself up on these occasions by slyly licking the churn-dasher; but the good cheer on the dasher was a stimulant that left him more miserable than it found him.

" "Cheer him up!" was the fierce retort; "what could cheer him!

And have the LL.D.s of Cambridgeold Cambridgeyet to learn that the compound always implies the preëxistence of the simple, and that "a cheer" is, by logical necessity, the antecedent of "three cheers"?

" The cheers of the troops, officers and men, were the answer given to the reproaches and hopes of their general: all hesitation passed away; and Caesar set out with his army.

A few men began to cheer, and within seconds the enthusiasm had infected the rest of the pirates and the cheer became a roar.

10 Metaphors for  cheers