11 Metaphors for l

L is the piston rod, which, by means of the cross head and side rods, is connected to the side levers or beams, one of which is shown at H H.

L was a lily, So white and so sweet!

L is a Lark, A sociable bird; His song in the meadow Is frequently heard.

Baretti, in a marginal note, says that C L is 'Charlotte Lennox.'

L is a thin elastic bag representing the lungs.

We see a town ahead; calling to a man by the roadside, "What place is that?" "L" is the long drawn shout as we go flying by.

L was a small village on the coast, within a mile of Benfield Lodge; and from its natural convenience, it had long been resorted to by the neighboring gentry for the benefit of sea bathing.

The syllable man has two semivowels; and the letter l, as in "ful fil´," is the most sonorous of consonants; yet, as we see above, among their false examples of short syllables accented, different authors have given the words "man" and "man´ner," "disman´tle" and "com pel´," "mas´ter" and "let´ter," with sundry other sounds which may easily be lengthened.

"l" and "v," because "l" and "v" are the Roman symbols for "fifty" and "five." 6.

L 10 As the stress increases there is a corresponding increase in the strain.

k l (latitude 21 degrees 5 minutes 40 seconds, longitude 149 degrees 54 minutes 25 seconds) is about three-quarters of a mile in diameter; it is of peaked shape; at three-quarters of a mile off its south-east end there is a dry rocky lump.

11 Metaphors for  l