9 Metaphors for stove

"I think," said Barbara, boldly, "that a cooking-stove, all polished up, is just as handsome a thing as there is in a house!"

But the plural of staff has hitherto been generally written staves; a puzzling and useless anomaly, both in form and sound: for all the compounds of staff are regular; as, distaffs, whipstaffs, tipstaffs, flagstaffs, quarterstaffs; and staves is the regular plural of stave, a word now in very common use with a different meaning, as every cooper and every musician knows.

The stove was a little box of an affair, with two "griddles" on top, and was quite capable of warming that floor.

The first stove I cooked on was a white woman's stove, that was 1890.

The close iron stoves they have introduced among you are terrible enemies to beauty.

"Maybe your stove won't be drawin' just right at the first," said Maggie Corbett, apologetically.

The gas stove was the contrivance which interested the colored woman most.

boat stove!" was the general cry.

These air-tight coal stoves, such as are in ordinary use, are the worst of all, since their name gives confidence to the public, who do not consider that, while they have the merit of "keeping the fire through the night," they do not keep the gases within.

9 Metaphors for  stove