21 Metaphors for stores

The stores in New York are now the most beautiful in the world, and the women are dressed to perfection.

The new store was an extremely neat, bright, and well-ordered establishment; yet to ascend into the drawing-rooms seemed to the apothecary like going from the hold of one of those smart old packet-ships of his day into the cabin.

The stores that Peter had once looked upon as show-places were poor two-story brick or frame buildings, defiled by time and wear and weather.

In such a village as ours, at such a time, the store becomes the club of the community.

The next store she went into was a nice-looking meat market and grocery combined, I followed in behind her.

Susan hoped 'that girl' did not want to evict her, and Bessie suggested that a co-operative store was a more probable peril.

War-like stores were their grand desideratum; and though they would accept of any thing you chose to give them, yet they always had hopes they should finally receive their favourite presents of a stocking of powder, a piece of lead, or a musket.

The drug store, the jewellery store (for there was a jewellery store, and a prosperous one), the grocery storecombining a large trade in candythe post office, and the dry-goods storewhere two extremes were made to meet with a display of hats and shoes in the same windowwere every one open and crowded.

Rively's store was the headquarters for these men, and there they held their meetings.

For a brief time, the store became a court room; a flour barrel was the judge's bench, a soap box and milking stool, the lawyers' seats.

They are only the poor little fishes in the sea, while the department stores are sharks, sharp-toothed monsters of destruction!"

"Well, it's very queer stores should be twins," thought Dotty.

Cigar-stores ain't the place for you, Jimmie.

A good hardware store in a country town is a center of democracy for town and country alike.

Lower Canada had taught him French, and the stores he found were revelry to him.

II.But so great a store of everything necessary for a war had been a long time before laid up in the town, and so great a number of engines, that no vineae made of hurdles could withstand their force.

McKibbin's store, at the corner of Washington and streets, is more than half a mile from here.

This store is the atmosphere, & the process by which the fertilizing substance may be obtained is vegetation.

A large store of consumable goods is thus not a fundamental necessity of a prosperous society.

Its ample stores and munitions of war were a priceless boon to Montgomery, who now redoubled his efforts to take St Johns.

The leading stores were Wilson's and Clark's.

21 Metaphors for  stores