11 Metaphors for tenders

Tender, and full of sentiment were the sounds at first, as if the musician were acting the scene of the opera

Tender, delicate, and nutritious flesh is the great aim; and these qualities, I can affirm without fear of contradiction, were never attained by a dungeon-fatted chicken: perpetual gloom and darkness is as incompatible with chicken life as it is with human.

The tender of a cigar in the South is a recognition of comradeship which is a most potent mollifier.

The tender of the mill was an old man, whose despised locks were gray and thin, and on whose brow the hands of time and sorrow had written many effaceless lines.

The station-tender was the only person in sight.

'This spirit tender' is the 'quickening life' of the renascent year; or briefly the Spring.

Tender is the night.

But its awful prophecy was what affected me most now; for destruction had fallen on something more tender than aught that cabinet held.

Notwithstanding she had leaped to the redoubt amid screaming shells and whistling balls, to persuade him back to the trenches, he could see nothing more tender than love of humanity in her act.

He told us that human flesh required a greater number of hours to cook than any other; that if not done enough it was very tough, but when sufficiently cooked it was as tender as paper.

Then God can be more strong than man, and more tender than woman likewise.

11 Metaphors for  tenders