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.

10 Metaphors for  subs