15 Metaphors for huts

The "Portsmouth hut" is the favorite.

Their huts were merely slight shelters against the rain.

And here, within the walls, were the little huts the pioneers built for themselves.

As this hut, in comparison with the others, was a complete palace, the whole of the neighbours were constantly collected here.

The hut was a substantial looking building with a padlock on the door.

The negro huts on several of the plantations that we passed through were the most miserable human habitations I ever beheld.

The log hut was a store as well as a place of defence, and as they offered to pay for it there was no refusing their requestat least so the major thought.

The hut becomes a paradise through thee!

It is fine to see the way everyone sets to work to put things straight; in a day or two the hut will become the most comfortable of houses, and in a week or so the whole station, instruments, routine, men and animals, &c., will be in working order.

The other half of me remembers that I am aging, that Caradawc's hut is leaky, that, in fine, bodily comfort is the single luxury of which one never tires.

The so-called "hut" of the Y.M.C.A. workers was really only another dilapidated and abandoned German dugout, which had been hurriedly arranged as a sort of makeshift headquarters, where the doughboys who could get leave might gather and find such amusement as the conditions afforded.

Just outside our huts and opening on to the road was a broad, natural terrace, with a fine view backwards over the plain.

The log hut was a store as well as a place of defence, and as they offered to pay for it there was no refusing their requestat least so the major thought.

The hut was really a shooting-box built by Paul some years earlier, and inhabited by a head-keeper, one learned in the ways of bear and wolf and lynx.

Not the wattled hut is his home, but the land, the winds, the hill front, the stream.

15 Metaphors for  huts