17 Metaphors for inside

The inside is a stringy, spongy-looking mass, with small seeds embedded in a gummy viscid substance.

A thermometer is a glass tube, fastened to a piece of wood or perhaps tin, and inside is a thin, shiny column.

Had one outside was the hawk and some inside was the hen and chickens.

I then knew that I was right, and went straight up to the bower, inside of which was a summer-house, with steps leading up to it, and spread with soft twigs and flowers for a carpet.

Entrance was effected by a passage not much wider than a fox burrow, which sloped downwards 10 or 12 ft. to the floor of the house; the inside was oval in shape, and was walled with overlapping rough stone slabs; the roof frequently reached to within a foot of the earth's surface; they probably served as store-houses, winter-quarters, and as places of refuge in times of war.

"Inside was a fire, and by its light I could see that the place was empty of human life, but that a collection of objects already familiar to me almost filled it.

Down the inside of each arm are nearly three hundred round suckers.

" Inside is another painting of a cat playing a fiddle, and truly that one might be saying, "Ha!

I thought that its inside was wholly Norman, and was most agreeably surprised by finding the whole inside groined in every part with excellent late decorated or perpendicular work.

He was fond of the idea that he went into the battle of life covered and protected by a great shield, but that the inside of the shield was a mirror in which he could always see himself.

About ten years ago Bob purchased the country habitation of a bankrupt: the mere shell of a building Bob holds no great matter; the inside is the test of elegance.

The inside is pale purplish-brown, with a yellowish-white muscular impression.

We conducted this inquiry on metaphysical principles; and it was ascertained satisfactorily, that the roof of the coach, which some had affected to call the attics, and some the garrets, was really the drawing-room, and the box was the chief ottoman or sofa in that drawing-room; whilst it appeared that the inside, which had been traditionally regarded as the only room tenantable by gentlemen, was, in fact, the coal-cellar in disguise.

My inside be that comical I don't know what to do with he; he be all on the ebb and flow.

The insides of houses aren't His world, are they?

In the eastern part there is still another court surrounded with a wall, on the inside of which is a colonnade covered with large slabs of stone.

If he was wanted for hunting hares, a stuffed hare was dragged before him, inside of which was a live chicken, whose head and liver was his reward if he did his work well.

17 Metaphors for  inside