35 Metaphors for grays

GRAY 'Tis a brave youthI cannot strike at him.

Gray were his eyes, too, and his suit, a comfortable baggy suit with the slouch of the wearer impressed into it, the coat hiking center back, the pocket-flaps half in, half out, and the knees sagging out of press.

Just think of it, ye many friends Who wish him worlds of joy, That Charlie Gray is six to-day, A patriotic boy.

MEPHISTOPHELES Gray is, young friend, all theory:

Gray was the fifth of twelve children, and the only one that survived.

I thought "Rosamund Gray" was a pretty modest thing.

A bachelor gray, was Valentine Brown; He lived in a mansion just out of the town, A mansion spacious and grand; He was wealthy as Vanderbilt, Astor or Tome, Had money invested abroad and at home,

Gray was an enthusiastic scholar; Walpole was then a gay and giddy voluptuary, although predestined to sour down into the most cold-blooded and cynical of gossips.

Gray and King were the two men who were with Burke and Wills; and for equipment they had started with six camels, one horse, and three months' provisions.

Miss Gray, with her kitten eyes, is an actress, though she shows it not at all, and pupil to the former, whose gestures she mimics in comedy to the disparagement of her own natural manner, which is agreeable.

Gray is a poet for whom, in common with most Englishmen, the present writer has a sincere respect.

A naturalist who sixty years ago had, and perhaps still has, a much wider fame than Asa Gray was Louis Agassiz.

Black are the cows, and gray is every cat.

Jim Gray was the most unconcerned of the group.

In 1761, Gray writes to Smollett, thanking him for kind notices in the "Critical Review," and asking his influence in regard to certain theories concerning the longitude, of which Gray was the inventor.

Gray was a brilliant bookworm.

Pearl gray, with terra cotta, red and green tints is the basic color of this boiling, seething mass, which seems to be continually at unrest and in a course of worry.

Gray had been Walpole's traveling companion in France and Italy, and the two had quarreled and separated, but were afterward reconciled.

Thomas Gray was the first person in Europe who seems to have exhibited a real love of mountains (see his Letters).

Both Gray and Walpole were good correspondents, and their printed letters are among the most delightful literature of the kind.

Gray of sage, rocks, pines, cedars, piñons, heights and depths and plains, wild and open and lonelythat was Arizona.

Gray was not a sun shining in his strength, but he was the morning star, prognosticating the coming of a warmer and brighter poetic day.

"Is Mr. Gray ill?" she said.

Annie Gray and her son were as much a mystery as ever.

Professor James B. Gray, although this was vacation time, was the sort of man who got real and continued pleasure out of instruction, especially concerning his hobbies.

35 Metaphors for  grays