14 Metaphors for winners

He said the winner at Langton Lea would be Silver Bell."

Winner or looser, neither is our foe; For mutually we'll beare our selues in all Or taking part leane to the strongest wall.

I little thought then that the only certain winner at the gaming-table is the table itself, and made up my mind as I walked alone and disappointed through Windsor Park, on my way to the station, that I would never touch a card againand I never did.

During the fifteen winters of our wedded life many ponies passed from our hands, but this little winner, Ohiyesa, was a constant member of our family.

The winner is 'Alice in Wonderland'; 'Through the Looking-Glass' is in the twenty, but much lower down.

When it had burned out, both sexes engaged in a game of ball, and the winner became the King of Summer or of the Ball and had the right to choose his Queen.

Second winners were: 1919, Wilbur Daniel Steele's "For They Know Not What They Do," and, 1920, Frances Noyes Hart's "Contact!"

Do you not agree with me that a "bread-winner" can be a conscientious reformer?

But the prize-winner was the Fiat racing machine which threw a tire while going fifty-five miles an hour on the Brighton Beach track.

The winner of the first is Beeswing; of the second, Falcon; and of the third, Lightning.

The prize-winners, determined in the manner set forth, were Margaret Prescott Montague's "England to America" and Wilbur Daniel Steele's "For They Know Not What They Do."

That winners of the Derby who have become eventually four-wheeler cab-horses are ninety-six in number, but that there is only one authentic instance of a four-wheeler cab-horse having become a Derby winner.

Second winners were: 1919, Wilbur Daniel Steele's "For They Know Not What They Do," and, 1920, Frances Noyes Hart's "Contact!"

Sometimes the winner was a woman, and it was then her privilege to select her royal mate.

14 Metaphors for  winners