16 Metaphors for male

"This is a republication of a dull, profligate Haywoodian production, in which all the males are rogues, and all the females whores, without a glimpse of plot, fable, or sentiment."

The male is a beautiful, tiny, two-winged midge, but the female is a wingless, footless, little sack, without eyes or other organs of special sense, which lies motionless under a flat, thin, circular, reddish scale composed of wax and two or three cast skins of the insect itself.

The qualifications for electors (males only) are: an age of twenty years, registration, and payment of a land tax of $5.

The male is a magnificent bird, and has perhaps as fine plumage as any bird on the border; the flesh yields the most delicate eating of any game bird I know; the slices of mingled brown and white from the breast are delicious.

The other male is liftin' his head but his eyes are still shot, evidently he feels the dawn of sunthin' better and he's waking up, while standin' erect is the graceful figger of a female, beautiful and noble, full of boundin' life and light, holdin' up high over her head a star.

"Most birds have two coats a year, and the male's is the brighter," continued Nat eagerly, proud to show that he remembered.

Hefor only the male is so brightly coloredis coal-black with a dull-red back.

Because with singing birds the male is the largest.

In Robert Paltock's Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins, 1751, a flying people are described, among whom the males were "Glums" and the females "Gawries.

In this case a male is a male, and a female a female.

It is from this circumstance, that the male is the wisdom of love, and the female is the love of that wisdom; therefore from creation there is implanted in each a love of conjunction so as to become a one; but on this subject more will be said in the following pages.

The other male is liftin' his head but his eyes are still shot, evidently he feels the dawn of sunthin' better and he's waking up, while standin' erect is the graceful figger of a female, beautiful and noble, full of boundin' life and light, holdin' up high over her head a star.

The males are jolly minstrels once more, all black, white, and buff, hurrying home to their nesting grounds.

All males are masculine gender."Ib., p. 28.

The males were snuff color and the female much darker.

It is generally believed that the young males are the best singers, and that age diminishes their vocal capacity.

16 Metaphors for  male