19 Metaphors for fare

The fares to Benares are: first cabin, 257 rupees (25 pounds 14s.); second cabin, 216 rupees (21 pounds 12s.).

It seems more and more certain that a very simple fare is all that is needed hereplenty of seal meat, flour, and fat, with tea, cocoa, and sugar; these are the only real requirements for comfortable existence.

The fare was rice, curry, salt pork, potatoes, and beans; for at this season the game was poor, and the fish hardly yet running with regularity.

In olden times,if classic poets say The simple truth, as poets do to-day, When Charon's boat conveyed a spirit o'er The Lethean water to the Hadean shore, The fare was just a penny,not too great, The moderate, regular, Stygian statute rate.

50, while the ordinary single fare is Frs.

"But I told you, sir, the fare out to your ship would be half a sov.

We got through the town safely and at the river we found a steamboat bound for San Francisco and the fare was two ounces.

A Fox invited a Stork to dinner, at which the only fare provided was a large flat dish of soup.

Some time, far back, my Christmas fare Was turkey and a chine, With puddings made of things most rare, And plenty of good wine.

there are only some sixty on board; but I do not feel equally grateful for their allowing me to pay double price for a cabin to myself when two-thirds of them are empty, not to mention that the single fare is eight guineas.

The inside fare was at that time sixpence each person.

The fare for one or two persons is sixty-two cents per hour; for three persons, eighty-seven cents an hour; for four persons, $1.24 and a tip to the driver anywhere from one cent to fifteen cents, according to the time he has been with you.

In the very days of their greatest scarcity that winter, when almost every man was dressed in skins, and the daily fare was thistle roots, he declared to them at a Sunday service: "A time of plenty is at handof great plenty.

Our fare that day was a little bread and water; we walked steadily on, but owing to the wet roads, made only thirty miles.

CHAPTER X BEN GOES TO NEW YORK Pentonville was thirty-five miles distant from New York, and the fare was a dollar, but an excursion ticket, carrying a passenger both ways, was only a dollar and a half.

The fare was two shillings and sixpence.

"But we'll have a high old time, and if the bill o' fare is a little ... restricted, there's nothin' to prevent our programme of toasts, songs, and miscellaneous contributions from bein' rich and varied.

"It's fourpence the single journey, so the fare there and back for three of us'll be two bob.

His food was deluged with ginger and pepper; his favourite fare was raw eggs filled with red pepper, and raw onions, of which he ate enormous quantities.

19 Metaphors for  fare