12 Metaphors for chest

Ch. without Mr. Dodgson will be a strange place, and it is difficult to realise it even while we listen to the special solemn anthems and hymns to his memory in our cathedral.

The Woman's Man expresses himself wholly in that Motion which we call Strutting: An elevated Chest, a pinched Hat, a measurable Step, and a sly surveying Eye, are the Marks of him.

"The chest," he says, "should be a passive agent; the larynx and mouth, aiding the diaphragm, alone have a right to act in breathing; the action of the larynx consists of a depression, that of the mouth should produce the canalization (concavity) of the tongue and the elevation of the veil of the palate.

The convex eccentric chest is the sign of the agent, or of him who gives.

And Lady Kirkbank thinks my chest is just a little weakI almost broke down the other night in that lovely little song of Jensen'sand that a winter in the south is just what I want.

That cedar chest has been my bank for forty years, and I shall not change my habits at my age.

The chest of Daggett, however, was a regular inmate of the forecastle, and, from its appearance, had made almost as many voyages as its owner.

"My chest is the chest of the Mighty one of terror.

The chest is a chamber with bony walls, the ribs connecting in front with the breastbone, and behind with the spine.

The chest drawn in with the shoulders elevated, is the expression of the sublime.

My chest is not the better of it yet.

Thy chest is marble, and thy tender breasts Are apples whose sweet scent makes well the ill.

12 Metaphors for  chest