15 Metaphors for dean

The Dean of Westminster at the time was Ireland, the friend of Gifforddean from 1815 to 1842.

Rev. Philotas Dean, the only white teacher connected with this institution, was its first principal.

Higher up the river were two houses where the Dean was much belovedBanchory Lodge, his uncle General Burnett's, where also lived his dear aunt, the widowed Mrs. Forbes; and Blackhall, where, in the time I have in my mind, lived his aunt, Mrs. Russell, the widow of my uncle Francis Russell, a woman of many sorrows, but whose sweet voice and silver laugh brought joy into the house even amidst sickness and sorrow.

The dean of the American missionary colony is Rev. R. A. Hume, of Ahmednagar, who belongs to the third, and his daughter to the fourth, generation of missionaries in the family.

Mr. Malone traces their consanguinity to Swift's grandmother, Elizabeth Dryden, being the daughter of a brother of Sir Erasmus Driden, the poet's grandfather; so that the Dean of St. Patrick's was the son of Dryden's second cousin, which, in Scotland, would even yet be deemed a near relation.

DEAN, ELIZABETH B. Murder is a serious business.

The Dean was an abstraction; certainly much more abstract than Priam Farll.

DEAN, ELIZABETH B. Murder is a collector's item.

Wesley Dean, now in his blue overalls and working shirt, became a king in his own domain, a part of the fair primitiveness about them.

There is, no doubt, a more vivid and effective way; one in which the Dean of Westminster is a great master, though it is not the method which he followed in what is probably his most perfect work, the Life of Dr. Arnoldthe method of singling out points, and placing them, if possible, under a concentrated light, and in strong contrast and relief.

" "I must inform you," said Uncle John, "that Myrtle Dean is just a little waif whom my nieces picked up on the train.

The Dean of the Assembly is Pedro Oropesa; next to him comes Ludovico Zapato; then, in regular order, Fernando Tellez, Garcias Moxica, Lorenzo Carvajal; Toribio Santiago sits next to the last-named, and after him come Juan Lopez, Palacios Rivas, and Ludovico Polanco.

The Dean was an enthusiastic admirer of Dr. Chalmers, and on the evening of March 4, 1849, he read a memoir of the life and labours of Chalmers at a meeting of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.

My second lecture was delivered on September 27th, at Mr. Moncure D. Conway's Chapel, in St. Paul's Road, Camden Town, and redelivered a few weeks later at a Unitarian Chapel, where the Rev. Peter Dean was minister.

The Dean is so absurd an oaf, that he deserves to be ridiculed.

15 Metaphors for  dean