13 Metaphors for skirts

" But a hooped skirt with a history, touching and teaching, is no theme for flippancy; so, by your leave, I will unwind my story tenderly, and with reverential regard for its smooth turns of sequence.

Ruth flew after him as if her thin white skirts had been strong, swift wings.

Her short red satin skirt, a gift of her happy lady's, was the finest ever worn by exultant nurse.

Her skirt is black, her apron blue.

A mighty Phantasm, half concealed In darkness of his own exceeding light, Which clothed his awful presence unrevealed, Charioted on the ... night Of thunder-smoke, whose skirts were chrysolite.

The gored skirt was a fearful job, as any one who has ever plunged into the mysteries will testify; and before the facing, even experienced Pris quailed.

The skirt was not even, the collar, having lost a support, sagged at one side and just below the girdle belt there was a small, jagged rent.

"For one thing, miss, that skirt ain't a respectable garment.

She wore a broad hat of straw, I remember, and her skirt and kirtle were of green, the fairies' colour.

The long skirt was the symbol of her degradation.

The skirt is pleated, light summer stuff, and falls in a straight line.

Her waist was a washcloth, her skirt was a towel, She looked down at him with a horrible scowl; One hand was a brush and the other a comb, Her forehead was soap and her pompadour foam!

The skirt is a little frayedoh!

13 Metaphors for  skirts