57 Metaphors for hat

Many native Jews have attempted to wear European clothes; and a European hat, or coat, is now the rage among native Jewesses, who all aspire to get a husband wearing either.

But, of course, this paper thing would not do for street wear, and the hat he now wore was the least wealth-suggesting he had been able to find.

The hat of the elder was wreathed round with yellow flowers; the younger, whose hat was only a rimless crown, had stuck it round with laurel leaves.

The doffed hat and the clutched Argus became the mark of his drink-bought serfs.

The yellow paradise plume floated in the wind, the hat having become a little deranged by her rapid flight.

His hat is upand every hair Bristles, and whitens in the moon!

Why a hat like a Colonial horse marine?" "Oh, this is the uniform of a bus-conductor," replied Jay. Kew scanned it with distaste.

Chief in singularity were their hats, if hat be the proper designation of the volcanic-looking gray cone which adhered to the head by some inscrutable dynamic law, and seemed rather fitted for carrying out the stratagem of shoeing a troop of horse with felt than for protecting a human skull.

Miss La Touche happened to be next me, so she spoke to me, and said my hat was "too devey for words" (the blue one you got at Caroline's); and by-and-by we had lunch, and at lunch Lord Valmond came and sat by me, and so Mrs. Smith did too, and she gushed at me.

Down by Gimp's I sent her she should buy herself one of them red straw hats is the fad with the girls now.

In their long, graceful, waistless tunics of brilliant hues, their woven bamboo or pandanus hats, decorated with fresh flowers, their feet bare or thrust into French slippers, their brown eyes shining with yearning, they were so many Circes to us from the sea.

Some upper flannel garment, and something in the nature of trousers, with a belt round his middle, and an old straw-hat would be all the wardrobe required by him.

The felt hat became over almost the whole of Europe a cap, taking the exact form of the head, and having a wide, flat brim turned up on one side.

My hat was a target.

Her hat was a velvet affair, so awkward and heavy it seemed to weigh down her head, and her candleflame hair was smothered under it.

Your old hat would not be a pretty present.

THEIR NATIVE WILDS Miss Judy's hat was more or less a barometer of the state of her emotions.

Beauty became an extravagance, as if top-hats and umbrellas were not the real extravagancea landscape from the land of the goblins.

My school hats always looked the worse for wear, and my Sunday ones were not much better; but once my mother took me to the city, and bought me, for school, a far handsomer hat than I had hitherto worn for best, and a still better one for great occasions.

"That new hat's a great success.

When the hat is silk, it requires brushing every day with a soft brush; after rain, it requires wiping the way of the nap before drying, and, when nearly dry, brushing with the soft brush and with the hat-stick in it.

Lord RIBBLESDALE said that there was no doubt that a tall hat was the most becoming headgear for a gentleman.

He followed this up by saying, accusingly, that the hat and clothes I was then wearing were English.

Sez he, "The first work I do when I git home will be to git a hat for the old mair; I won't have to buy one, Tirzah Ann's last summer hat will be jest the thing.

His hat was a fine panama with a broad black ribbon; his frock-coat was of thin cloth, plain, dark, and altogether civilized; his light trousers were cut gaiter-fashion, and strapped under the instep; his small boots were patent-leather, and of the ordinary type.

57 Metaphors for  hat