19 Metaphors for giant

It was the same dear, honest face; but to think that this giant was little Bob!

If the overaction or excess of secretion begins in childhood or adolescence, that is, before puberty, there results a great elongation of the bones, so that a giant is the consequence.

Giants are big fellows, but Death's a bigger, though he may come in a little shape.

the Giant is powerfulthe water which boils before us will be cold when touched by a friend of the Giant.

XL., line 9: the giants are, I think, those lawless, selfish, anti-social forces idealised by Machiavelli in his Principe, as Campanella read that treatisethe strong men and mighty ones of an impious and godless world.

Just so, the Grizzly Giant is the king tree of the Mariposa Forest.

The said Giant was the work of Michelangelo Buonarroti.

A GIANT'S UNSEEN HANDS III.

The giant is a Christian; he believes in Christ, and has renounced his false prophet, Mahomet."

Your giant is a butterfly; to-day he roams on gilded wings, to-morrow he will show his hideousness and be forgotten.

The "Giant" is a rugged deposit presenting in form a miniature model of the Colosseum.

Gee, but the giant is a coward.

I found, in short, that the tremendous "Lancashire Giant" was merely a pretty tall man, and nothing more.

The giant, who stood highest up on the island, and raised his arms, was a church with two cross-towers; all the sea-trolls and monsters, which he thought he had seen, were boats and ships of every description, that lay anchored all around the island.

Intellectual giants, Dickens and Thackeray, were equally gigantic spendthrifts.

It was unnatural, it was wrong, that this giant in the body should be a giant in adroitness also.

This hyperborean literary giant, speaking a Babylonian dialect, smiting remorselessly all pretenders and quacks, and even honest fools, was himself personally a bundle of contradictions, fierce and sad by turns.

The giant of the Seal family is the Sea-elephant; a big lumbering fellow, with a most peculiar nose.

The Giant, who was a good seven-footer, working up to seven and a half feet, as an engineer might say, with the help of his boots and helmet, was the exact opposite of the Dwarf in disposition.

19 Metaphors for  giant