11 Metaphors for phillips

Phillips was his real father, but he sold him to the Warrens and he took their name and kept it.

Mr. Phillips, mine host, soon became my right-hand man.

PHILLIPS, WENDELL, slavery abolitionist and emancipationist generally, born at Boston, U.S., and bred to the bar; was Garrison's aide-de-camp in the cause, and chief after his death (1811-1884).

PHILLIPS, WENDELL, slavery abolitionist and emancipationist generally, born at Boston, U.S., and bred to the bar; was Garrison's aide-de-camp in the cause, and chief after his death (1811-1884).

As you know, Wendell Phillips was the editor of that paper at that time: "A man with the ballot in his hand is the master of the situation.

In person, Phillips was a smart old gentleman, with the ordinary lineaments of his race stamped on his countenance.

Now that his brain had cleared, and he knew what hand had smitten him, and why, Phillips was by far the calmest of the four.

Mary Phillips was an exceedingly bright and quick young woman, and I am quite sure that she could see into the state of a man's feelings as well as any one.

Mr. Phillips has applied to the British Vice-consul to know whether, in case of his going up to Morocco to carry a present for the Belgium merchants, here, Phillips, being a Jew, will be obliged to pull off his shoes, which would be depriving him of the rights of British-born subjects, who stand with their shoes on in the Shereefian presence.

This Phillips was a fiddler, who travelled up and down Wales, and was much celebrated for his skill.

Phillips is probably the person whose skill in poetry is extolled by Chatterton in an elegy on the death of his acquaintance of that name, which has some stanzas of remarkable beauty.

11 Metaphors for  phillips