103 Metaphors for servicing

The Pantry was full of Home Delicacies such as he couldn't get at the Hotel, and the Service was the best ever.

His service to India in the latest years of his life was no suddenly accepted task.

He remarks in his Diary: "I believe the service of the young Friends in the First-day Schools has been a blessing to themselves as well as to their pupils.

His public services in defence of freedom and of the Protestant religion were the real causes of the resolution to get rid of him.

Or of what service to her would be the contrary if she were herself to think,nay, to know,that she had done wrong?

His long and faithful services in many subordinate but important stations, his recent elevation to the highest in honor and power, and the brief term allotted to him in the enjoyment of it are circumstances of themselves which must awaken the liveliest sympathy in every bosom.

Secret service has been long a term of great use to the ministers of this nation; a term of art to which such uncommon efficacy has been hitherto annexed, that the people have been influenced by it to pay taxes, without expecting to be informed how they were applied, having been content with being told, when they inquired after their properties, that they were exhausted and dissipated in secret service.

The fundamental doctrines of materialism, like those of spiritualism, and most other "isms," lie outside "the limits of philosophical inquiry," and David Hume's great service to humanity is his irrefragable demonstration of what these limits are.

Finally, the service is practically the only stroke in the game of Squash Tennis which permits you the luxury of time prior to hitting.

The obligation of national defence was incumbent, as of old, on all land-owners, and the customary service of one fully armed man for each five hides of land was probably the rate at which the newly endowed follower of the king would be expected to discharge his duty.

ThirdlyThat they were not the men whose services were the most likely to be called for by the sovereign, in the present crisis.

False service is the false subordination of the pure faith of reason to the statutory faith, by which the attainment of the goal of religious development is hindered and the laity are brought into dangerous dependence upon the clergy.

Perhaps his most memorable service was the share he had in drawing the Articles of Confederation, although he left Philadelphia before his signature could be attached.

Universal Service is a fait accompli at last, or is shortly going to beand without anything very much in the way of exemption either.

Even the German Secret Service is not omniscient.

Domestic service is the only field of industry where the demand for workers permanently exceeds the supply.

Of such are 'sea-coast,' 'sea-forces' (the 'land- and sea-forces' used to be a common designation of what we now call the 'Army and Navy'), 'sea-service,' 'sea-serpent,' and 'sea-officer' (now superseded by 'naval officer').

Now, when I was a young buster chasin' cow-tails over the country I kind of thought the Forestry Service was a joke.

According to the findings of the Massachusetts State Bureau of Labor Statistics, whose investigation into previous occupation of fallen women was described in a former chapter, domestic service is a dangerous trade.

The service he expected from the three boats sent to the northward, was to trace the movement of the smuggler, and, should a suitable opportunity offer, to attempt to carry him by surprise.

One thing was clearly proven by that outbreak, viz.: that services to, and friendship for, Indians, are the best means of incurring their revenge.

Could there be a better illustration of Sir Frederick Pollock's noble tribute to the genius of the common law: "Remember that Our Lady, the Common Law, is not a task-mistress, but a bountiful sovereign, whose service is freedom.

But of what service was nobility if its obligations were abolished?

The church services were a weekly torture, but feeling as I did that I was only a doubter, I spoke to none of my doubts.

At the apex stand covenanted civilians; whose service is now practically a close preserve for white men.

103 Metaphors for  servicing