5 Metaphors for status

"The legal status of the Indian and his property is the condition which makes it incumbent on the government to assume the obligation of protector.

The status of the Negro in the United States' is more a question of national mental attitude toward the race than of actual conditions.

This status may be "Duty" (available for all duty), "Quarters" (patient to remain in tent or company street), and "Hospital" (patient to be sent to the hospital).

This status may be "Duty" (available for all duty), "Quarters" (patient to remain in tent or company street), and "Hospital" (patient to be sent to the hospital).

The changing status of the married woman, her increasing economic independence and its bearing upon her economic responsibility, are all facts having an influence upon woman as a wage-earning member of the community, but how, and in what degree, they affect her length of service, is still quite uncertain.

5 Metaphors for  status