16 Metaphors for dams

The dam was two hundred yards in width and flooded a mile of swamp and timber above it.

It is a moot point whether he was bred, as stated in most records of the time, by Captain Percy Williams, master of the Rufford, or by Jack Morgan, huntsman to the Grove; it seems, however, well established that the former owned his sire, also called Jock, and that his dam, Grove Pepper, was the property of Morgan.

Brockenhurst Rally was a most fortunate purchase from his breeder, Mr. Herbert Peel, and was by Brockenhurst Joe from a Bitters bitch, as from this dog came Roysterer and Ruler, their dam being Jess, an old Turk bitch; and from Rollick by Buff was bred Ruse and Ransome.

Phineas Fletcher says "this dam of sin" is a hag of loathsome shape, arrayed in steel, polished externally, but rusty within.

The dam of Red Lake is an elegantly modeled rib of metamorphic slate, brought into relief because of its superior strength, and because of the greater intensity of the glacial erosion of the rock immediately above it, caused by a steeply inclined tributary glacier, which entered the main trunk with a heavy down-thrust at the head of the lake.

As regards foundations, the dam of the Puentes reservoir in Spain is somewhat remarkablesee Fig.

"The Gatun Dam," was the answer.

Comet's second dam was a bronco, an' that will tell!

The dam in existence, however, was not very old; the animals having fled from their great enemy, man, rather than from any other foe.

The water by-wash is 7 ft. below the crest, and the dam is 26 ft. broad at the crest and 216 ft. at the base.

"That dam is indeed the key to the whole lock," murmured Mr. Alcando, as he looked at the wonderful piece of engineering.

This dam is 66 ft. high at the deepest point and 28 ft. wide at the crest, having to carry a public road.

The dam of Mr. Burke's Killeney Boy was a rough black and tan, a combination of colours which was believed to accompany the best class of coats.

The term dambrod, which has already supplied materials for a good story, arises from adopting French terms into Scottish language, as dams were the pieces with which the game of draughts was played (Fr. dammes).

Among the other calves was a speckled heifer, whose dam was a great crony of his own mother.

"'Dam!' was the impatient rejoinder.

16 Metaphors for  dams