230 Metaphors for fellow

"This fellow isn't that kind.

The fellow was a giant of a man, almost muscle-bound in his huge solidity.

That fellow who is trying to get in with the actors by the other door is the young physician U, who has effected some remarkable curesit's also said of him that he promises well.

Mrs. Egg beamed at him, although the fellow was a newcomer and didn't know Adam.

The fellow here was a Yankand you didn't know it?"

The fellow was a callous, black-hearted ruffian.

In the meanwhile Reuben had been supplied with something that served the purpose of a plaything by Mary Roscoe, and being seated in a corner of the room away from harm or interference, the little fellow shortly became so drowsy, that before long, notwithstanding the noise and chattering about him, his head drooped on his bosom, and he was so sound asleep that he was unconscious of his uncomfortable position.

We may accept it as a sound principle, based on common sense and justified by experience, that an audience should never be tempted to exclaim, "What a marvellously clever fellow is this playwright!

" "The poor fellow had been an invalid nearly all his life," said Murchison, to the captain, casually.

The fellow who knows all about that side of her is the barber Cupido.

If he had visited the States, then he had come back as unchanged as gold out of an acid bath; and as for being born there "That little beady-eyed, rat-faced fellow may be an American," I said.

A young fellow by the name of Rusou, a crack shot, was acting captain in the absence of our officers.

"The fellow's a cunning rogue.

Being asked next morning how he liked his attendant, his answer was, 'Not at all, Sir: the fellow's an ideot; he is as aukward as a turn-spit when first put into the wheel, and as sleepy as a dormouse.'

What an ass the fellow must be!"

"This fellow's a Hercules for muscle," said Jarvis to Jake, "but I've discovered several places in my anatomy not so well developed as they might be.

" "For that matter, the poor fellow is a stranger himself," said he, once more turning his lamp on the dead face.

Although he had expected the mayor-domo would come for the message, there was not much formality at the presidio, and the fellow was obviously a sailor.

"We've already seen that the fellow is a clever, as well as desperate, rascal.

But the universal consensus of opinion is that the fellow is a bounder and a tick, and that the moment he showed signs of wanting to get into the place he should have been met with a firm nolle prosequi and heartily blackballed.

The fellow who is soothing him with his Voltairian smile is the poet T, a young man of talent, a great friend of mine, and, for the very reason that he has talent, he has thrown away his pen.

I think the happiest fellow on earth is a master of fox-hounds, particularly if he hunts them himself: there's only one thing to beat it, and that's soldiering.

"That poor fellow was a picture of health two years ago, before he entered the employ of Denton, Day & Co.

The good fellow was the same old Willisstrong, brave, and generous.

Isn't it curious, by the way, that the fellow who stole and hid this girl should be the innocent means of revealing her biding place?"

230 Metaphors for  fellow