16 Metaphors for flatted

The flat was the root of all their trouble, there was something in its atmosphere, something gloomy and ominous.

From that moment the Markovitches' flat became for me the centre of my drama.

"My flat was just the second story of an old made-over house.

The whole flat, on to which the creek emerged from the hills, was one vast spring.

"But the flat is ratherrather comfortable when you get there," said Mr. Lanley, suddenly becoming embarrassed over his choice of an adjective.

The flat is the stable with the manger, and New York widens into Bethlehem.

Bidding farewell to the rocky Farnes, we sail past Budle Bay, into which runs the Warenburn and the Elwick burn, and underneath whose sandy flats is the buried town of Warnmouth, once a busy seaport, to which Henry III.

I did not of course know at this time of that final drama of the Thursday afternoon, but I knew of the adventure with the policeman, and it seemed to me that the flat was a cup into which the ingredients were being poured one after another until at last the preparation would be complete, and then....

The next thirteen miles down the river was fair average cattle pasture, extending for several miles to the right and left; open flats of atriplex and samphire occurring at intervals.

A second-story flat, comfortable though it was, was not a good place to bring up a little girl.

A small green edging for a flower bed can hardly be too trim; but large hedges with tops and sides cut as flat as boards, and trees fantastically shaped with the shears into an exhibition as full of incongruities as the wildest dream, have deservedly gone out of fashion in England.

From the first, however, the proceeding's fell as flat as ditch-water.

However, they all looked so cross and disagreeable that I took up the first thing I could lay my hand on (which happened to be the rolling-pin) and knocked them all down as flat as pan-cakes!

The Kutub Minár is a needle of red stone, that rises from a plain as flat as paper to a height of two hundred and fifty feet; and you might compare it, as you catch, approaching, glimpses of it at a distance, to a colossal chimney, a Pharos, or an Efreet of the Jinn.

Up this we wormed our way, as flat as snakes, with our noses in the dusty earth.

There is nothing to say of the country, for it is the same as on all the other sides of Berlin; the soil more horrid than anything I ever saw, and of course all as flat as water, but just now and then some rather nice villages....

16 Metaphors for  flatted