125 Metaphors for expressions

(Sad to say, these were women, with one or two exceptions in favour of menlike the Hatterwho perhaps might be called "old women of the male sex," save that the expression is a vile libel upon the sex that still contains the best of us.)

The Arabic expression is salam 'alaikum or 'alaika, i.e. "Peace be on you" or "on thee."

I was satisfied in time, that his rapt admiration as he gazed upon her, was something more than enthusiasm that she had excelled even his most ardent expectations; and the expression of her beautiful face, as she concluded, might have been the envy of a greater than the Signor.

If a Saxon wished to say, "good gifts," he had to have the proper case endings for both the adjective and the noun, and his expression was g=ode giefa.

The life of these cults is the Deed, their expression is the Rite.

The expression used is Pëensih, the border, or frontier.

His very expression, they said, was Scotch.

He was not, in fact, a man who was prone to gentle expressions, but having been framed by nature for a strong dominance over all around him, his habitual expression was a proud self-containment.

Here we use 4 and 12, not as numeral adjectives, but as nouns, the names of particular numbers, and as such, each conveys the idea of unity, and the entire expression is the subject of is, and conveys the idea of unity.

Nyoda's expression of amazement and concern was an added torture.

In the Syriac language, the common expression for "the married," or "the espoused," is "the bought."

This vigorous expression was a favorite of his.

And, if the first expression is only an abbreviation of one of these, the construction of the verb contains may be referred to Rule 14th.

BY GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH HEGEL TRANSLATED BY J. LOEWENBERG, PH.D. Assistant in Philosophy, Harvard University THE MEANING OF ART The appropriate expression for our subject is the "Philosophy of Art," or, more precisely, the "Philosophy of Fine Arts."

The expression which lived there was a resigned, suffering, stubborn courage.

The finest expression of it is the Song of Solomon, and it is easy to see that such a form of symbolism is specially liable to degradation, and is open to grave dangers, which it has not always escaped.

Uncommon expressions, strong flashes of wit, pointed similes, and epigrammatic turns, especially when laid too thick, are a disfigurement rather than any embellishment of discourse.

The correct expression is *vestido y calzado*.

The expression he used was "a poor lad."

the similar expression *buenas son mangas después de pascua* 'it's high time, but better late than never.'

Her mouth, too, was small and amiable, and her most frequent expression was a smile, which seldom broadened into a laugh, as she had her own reasons for preferring that her teeth should not be seen.

But you will more and more nearly approximate the ideal, will more and more nearly find that right expression has become second nature with you.

The expression is always a splendid amplification of the simple fact.

The expressions of devotion and delight of these poor people are the most fervent you can imagine.

Whether the expression of love, or of its disappointment, is "any very serious purpose" or not, I leave to the decision of the reader.

125 Metaphors for  expressions