10 Metaphors for haunt

Let it be enough to say, that our favourite haunt in all the gardens is a little dry valley, beneath the loftiest group of trees.

LAKE POETS, a school of English poets, the chief representatives of which were Wordsworth, Southey, and Coleridge, who adorned the beginning of the 19th century, and were so designated by the Edinburgh Review because their favourite haunt was the LAKE DISTRICT (q. v.) in the N. of England, and the characteristic of whose poetry may be summed as a feeling of and a sympathy with the pure spirit of nature.

Their favorite haunts are the tops of mountains covered with pines, where they delight to wander in places the most difficult of access.

His haunts are the pastures which have been half reduced to tillage, and are still partially filled with wild shrubbery; for he is not so familiar in his habits as the Hair-bird, that comes close up to our door-step, to find the crumbs that are swept from our tables.

Their favorite haunts are the tops of mountains covered with pines, where they delight to wander in places the most difficult of access.

Their chosen haunts are the great desolate steppes lying east of Penzhinsk (pen'-zhinsk) Gulf, where they wander constantly from place to place in solitary bands, living in large fur tents and depending for subsistence upon their vast herds of tamed and domesticated reindeer.

Its haunt was the bogeen, a green lane leading from the western end of the village.

Its principal haunt in Jamaica is the low limestone chain of hills, along the shore from Kingston Harbour and Goat Island, on to its continuation in Vere.

At the present day the chief haunts of the mountain sheep are the fresh Alpine meadows lying close to timber line, and fenced in by tall peaks; or the rounded grassy slopes which extend from timber line up to the region of perpetual snows.

The haunts of the game were continuous woods and bogs, hard to ride and from which no fox could be forced to break.

10 Metaphors for  haunt