10 Metaphors for passport

My passport is visé in the following terms: "Bon pour aller à Paris en suivant la route des armées alliées."

At the bureau of the police it was remarked to me that my passport was not en règle, the features of the bearer not being therein specified.

Here our passports were visèd for Prague, and we were allowed to proceed without any examination of baggage.

The new-come guest admires the ethereal state, The sapphire portal, and the golden gate; And now admitted in the shining throng, He shows the passport which he brought along: His passport is his innocence and grace, Well known to all the natives of the place.

A passport or a safe-conduct was the sine qua non of even the restricted liberty which had survived.

That passport is a means of identification for the bearer and secures to him all the rights and privileges guaranteed to citizens of the United States by treaties with the country in which he may be traveling.

Your passport is your patent of nobility, and that is Russian.

That passport is a means of identification for the bearer and secures to him all the rights and privileges guaranteed to citizens of the United States by treaties with the country in which he may be traveling.

"I am a British subject, and demand to be taken back to the port where my passport was viséd."

A United States passport is an instrument in writing, issued by the secretary of state and under his seal, informing the world that the bearer is a citizen of the United States, that he travels under its protection.

10 Metaphors for  passport