17 Metaphors for exchanging

Müller resumes the lead : "In the second grow heartsease and wild eglantine; Fair exchange is no theftfor my heart, give me thine.

The Stock Exchange is a den of thieves, and Maurice here

Soon after this, the Exchange was one mass of flame.

In God's name, if the Stock Exchange, and railway stagging, and the advertisements in the Protestant Hue-and-Cry, and the frantic Mammon-hunting which has been for the last fifty years the peculiar pursuit of the majority of Quakers, Dissenters, and Religious Churchmen, are not The World, what is?

Shaw, Exchange is no Robbery. Jul.

" That Exchange, which had so lately resembled a bustling temple of Mammon, was already a dark and sheeted ruin, its marble walls being cracked, defaced, tottering, or fallen.

The catastrophe is not very happily produced; the exchange of weapons is rather an expedient of necessity, than a stroke of art.

The Commercial Exchange is a fine large building, supported by pillars, and containing an area on the ground floor that would accommodate about 1,500 people.

If nations were perfectly wise and held perfectly sound economic theories, they would recognize that exchange is the union of forces, and that it is very foolish to hate or be jealous of your co-operators....

Jane was relating, in a manner peculiar to herself, in which was mingled that undefinable exchange of looks lovers are so fond of, some incident of her early life to the colonel that greatly interested him.

The Royal-Exchange is a Fabrick that well deserves to be so called, as well to express that our Monarch's highest Glory and Advantage consists in being the Patrons of Trade, as that it is commodious for Business, and an Instance of the Grandeur both of Prince and People.

But the Stock Exchange is an indulgent body.

Exchange of confidence with a fellow-Yorkshireman was the very thing he wanted.

The "Exchange" was an American vessel, which had been captured and confiscated by the French under the Rambouillet decree,a decree which both the Executive and the Congress of the United States had declared to constitute a violation of the law of nations.

And it is a patent fact that when two women make first acquaintance with each other, they behave with more constraint and dissimulation than two men would show in a like case; and hence it is that an exchange of compliments between two women is a much more ridiculous proceeding than between two men.

Foreign and domestic exchange is the sale of orders for the payment of specified sums of money at distant points.

That the telephone exchange was Murray Hill, and the street Madison Avenue meant nothing to Buzz.

17 Metaphors for  exchanging