10 Metaphors for subs
The sub-title would be 'A Guide to Packing,' or 'The Week-Ender's Friend.'" "Ah!" said the other, beginning to be interested.
O Sub! you certainly have been, A little raking, roguish creature, And in that face may still be seen, Each laughing loves bewitching feature!
The sub-title is "Memoirs of the Life and Happy Adventures of Mr. Benjamin Templeman; formerly a Scholar in Christ's Hospital.
Another sub-editor who caught my attention was Cornelius Gomes who worked on the sports desk with Nelson Dias.
The work in its inception (though not in its execution) is a polemic tracta family vindication, an act of pious duty; its sub-title might be, 'A Justification of John Quincy Adams for Breaking with the Federalist Party.'
In silence the Legionaries followed old Bara Miyan through the curtained doorway; and after them came the sub-chiefs.
A sub-division of this breed was the more leggy "Aberdeen" variety.
A sub would be a mighty fine craft for watching that sort of game, though.
Of course, Stefansson has said that a 'sub' is the most practical way to go there; that ice-floes are never more than ten feet thick and twenty-five miles wide, and all that; but there are too many unsettled problems relating to such a trip.
Miss Evans returned to England about the year 1857,the year of the Great Exhibition,and soon after became sub-editor of the "Westminster Review," at one time edited by John Stuart Mill, but then in charge of John Chapman, the proprietor, at whose house, in the Strand, she boarded.