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22-01-2011, 07:18 PM
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÇÚÏÇÁ
Pay attention to your enemies, for they are the first to discover your mistakes" [Antisthenes]
"You can discover what your enemy fears most by observing the means he uses to frighten you" [Eric Hoffer The Passionate State of Mind]
"A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies" [Oscar Wilde Lady Windermere's Fan]
"A very great man once said you should love your enemies, and that's not a bad piece of advice. We can love them, but, by God, that doesn't mean we're not going to fight them" [Norman Schwarzkopf]
"The enemy advances, we retreat."
"The enemy camps, we harass."
"The enemy tires, we attack."
"The enemy retreats, we pursue" [Mao Zedong slogan for his troops]
"We have met the enemy and he is us" [Walt Kelly Pogo]
"Yet is every man his own greatest enemy, and as it were his own executioner" [Thomas Browne Religio Medici]
"If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility" [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Driftwood]
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÝÞÑ
Destitution, like a famished rat, begins by gnawing at the edges of garments —Stefan Zweig
Her poverty was like a huge dream-mountain on which her feet were fast rooted … aching with the ache of the size of the thing —Katherine Mansfield
(I felt as) poor as a Catholic without a sin for confession —Harry Prince
Poor as a church mouse —Anon
Like Job, mice (and rats) have long been, and continue to be, proverbial comparisons for poverty. The writer most frequently credited with originating the simile is William Makepeace Thackeray who used it in Vanity Fair
Poor as a couple of shithouse spiders —Leslie Thomas
Poor as Job —Anon
A simile with a history dating back to the thirteenth century, and used by many illustrious writers. In Henry IV, Shakespeare extended it to, “Poor as Job … but not so patient,” while Sir Walter Scott in The Fortunes of Nigel made it, “Proud as Lucifer, and as poor as Job.” A variation that was once a popular American colloquialism is “Poor as Job’s turkey.”
Poor as sin —F. Scott Fitzgerald
A poor man who oppresses the poor is like a sweeping rain which leaves no food —The Holy Bible/Proverbs
The words ‘oppresses’ and ‘leaves’ have been modernized from ‘oppresseth’ and ‘leaveth.’
Poverty is death in another form —Latin proverb
Poverty, like wealth, entails a ritual of adaptation —Arthur A. Cohen
Wearing squalor like a badge —Wilfrid Sheed
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tr.v. friend·ed, friend·ing, friends
1. To add (someone) as a friend on a social networking website.
2. Archaic To befriend.
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÝÑÍ joy
Agitated with delight as a waving sea —Arabian Nights
Exhilaration spread through his breast like some pleasurable form of heartburn —Nadine Gordimer
A joyous feeling … shot up, like the grass in spring —Ivan Turgenev
(Heart is) as full of sunshine as a hay field —Josh Billings
Bliss … as though you’d suddenly swallowed a bright piece of that late afternoon sun and it burned in your bosom, sending out a little shower of sparks into every particle —Katherine Mansfield
The simile sets the mood for one of Mansfield’s best known stories, Bliss.
Ecstacy warm and rich as wine —Harvey Swados
Elated … like a lion tamer who has at last found the whip ***** which will subdue the most ferocious of his big cats —John Mortimer
Enjoy life like a young porpoise —George Santayana
Gorged with joy like a pigeon too fat to fly —Marge Piercy
Great joys, like griefs, are silent —Shackerley Marmion
Gurgle like a meadowlark —W. P. Kinsella
Heart … soared like a geyser —William Peden
Her heart became as light as a bubble —Antonia White
Joy careens and smashes through them like a speeding car out of control —Irving Feldman
Joy … felt it rumbling within him like a subterranean river —André Malraux
Joyful as carollers —David Leavitt
Joy is like the ague [malaria]; one good day between two bad ones —Danish proverb
Joy leaping within me … like a trout in a brook —George Garrett
Joy rises in me like a summer morn —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Joys are bubble-like; what makes them bursts them too —P. J. Bailey
Joy, simple as the wildflowers —George Garrett
Joys … like angel visits, short and bright —John Norris
The angel visit comparison has been as effectively linked to goodness and fame.
Joys met by chance … flow for us fresh and strong, like new wine when it gushes from the press —André Gide
The joys we’ve missed in youth are like … lost umbrellas; we musn’t spend the rest of life wondering where they are —Henry James
(He is) jubilant as a flag unfurled —Dorothy Parker
Men without joy seem like corpses —Kaethe Kolwitz
My heart lifted like a wave —Norman Mailer
Our joys are about me like a net —Iris Murdoch
Rose and fell, like a floating swimmer, on easygoing great waves of voluptuous joy —Christina Stead
A strong exhilaration ran through her like the fumes of wine —Ben Ames Williams
The sun in my heart comes up like a Javanese orange —Dylan Thomas
Their joys … ran into each other like water paints mingling to form delicate new colors —Sumner Locke Elliott
Triumphant as if I’d just hurled a shutout —W. P. Kinsella
The term shutout was particularly appropriate in Kinsella’s baseball novel, Shoeless Joe. Baseball expressions do, however, work well within other contexts.
A wonderful feeling enveloped him, as if light were being shaken about him —John
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÎæÝ
Afraid, as children in the dark —Dante Gabriel Rossetti
An air of terrifying finality, like the clap of doom —Herbert Lieberman
(A vague, uncatalogued) apprehension, as cold and disquieting as a first snowflake smudging the window of a warm and complacent room —Derek Lambert
As courage imperils life, fear protects it —Leonardo Da Vinci
As easily daunted as an elephant in the presence of a mouse —Ben Ames Williams
Brute terrors, like the scurrying of rats in a deserted attic, filled the more remote chambers of his brain —Robert Louis Stevenson
Cowardice, like alcoholism, is a lifelong condition —Susan Walton, New York Times/Hers, June 4, 1987
The cowardice Walton is comparing to alcoholism is that which drives the person who always does what is expected and when.
Cowardly as the hyena —Beryl Markham
His cowardice … fixed him like an invisible cement, or like a nail —Cynthia Ozick
Dreaded (her) like fire —Alexander Pushkin
The dread in his lungs lay heavy as cold mud —Peter Matthiessen
An eddy of fear swirled around her, like dust rising off the floor in some barren drafty place —Cornell Woolrich
Fear … a little like the fear of a lover who realizes that he is falling out of love —May Sarton
Fear … came and went like the throb of a nerve in an open tooth —James Warner Bellah
Fear … clutching at his heart … as if tigers were tearing him —Willa Cather
Fear … compressed me like a vise —Aharon Appelfeld
Fear fell [on crowd] like the shadow of a cloud —John Greenleaf Whittier
Fear … gnaws like pain —Dame Edith Sitwell
Fearing them as much … as a nervous child with memory filled with ghost-stories fears a dark room —W. H. Hudson
Fear is like a cloak which old men huddle about their love, as if to keep it warm —William Wordsworth
Fear … lay on me like a slab of stone —Norman Mailer
(In my body is a) fear like metal —Marilyn Hacker
The fear of failure … blew like a Siberian wind on our unprotected backs —John Le Carré
Fear oozed out (of the woods), as out of a *****ed bottle —Dorothy Canfield Fisher
Fear ran through him like a sickness —Brian Moore
Fears … fell from him like dreams from a man waking up in bed —G. K. Chesterton
Fear … sat heavy in the center of his body like a ball of badly digested food —George Garrett
Fears came scurrying out from their hiding places like mice —Paige Mitchell
Fear … seized all his bones like water —Hugh Walpole
Fear shot through me like a jolt of electricity —Sue Grafton
Fear spread like a common chill —Paige Mitchell
See Also: SPREADING (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Spreading)
The fear [of death]… stood silent behind them like an inflexible and cold-eyed taskmaster —Joseph Conrad
Fear stuck in his throat like a cotton hook —Charles Johnson
Fear swelled like some terrible travail —Heinrich Böll
Fear tangled his legs like a barricade —Harris Downey
Fear tastes like a rusty knife —John Cheever
Fear trills like an alarm bell you cannot shut off —John Updike
Fear worked like yeast in my thoughts, and the fermentation brought to the surface, in great gobs of scum, the images of disaster —Evelyn Waugh
Fear wrapped itself around his chest like a wide leather strap tightened by a maniac —François Camoin
Feeling as if an ice pick had been plunged into his liver —Peter Benchley
(I had) a feeling in my knees like a steering wheel with a shimmy —Rex Stout
Feel like clammy fingers were poking at my very heart —Borden Deal
Feel like a tight-rope walk high over hell —Kenneth Fearing
Feels fear, like a water bubble in his throat —Jessie Schell
Felt a chill … like swimming into a cold pocket in a lake —Tobias Wolff
Felt a driblet of fear … like a glug of water backing up the momentarily opened drain and polluting the bath with a dead spider, three lice, a rat turd, and things he couldn’t stand to name or look at —Bernard Malamud
Felt like a deer stepping out before the rifle of the hunter —Piers Anthony
Felt like a nightmare that had yet to be dreamt —Stanislaw J. Lem
Felt (the beginning of) panic, like a giant hand squeezing my heart —Frank Conroy
Felt panicky, like he was in a bad dream where he did and said all the wrong things and couldn’t stop —Dan Wakefield
Felt the chill of mortality … like a toddler gifted with some scraping edge of adult comprehension —Penelope Gilliatt
See Also: DEATH (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Death)
Felt the sick, oppressive crush of dread, like pinpoint ashes —Sylvia Berkman
A foreboding, dusky and cold like the room, crept to her side —Hugh Walpole
Frightened as Macbeth before the ghost of Banquo —Louis Veuillot
Frightened as though he had suddenly found himself at the edge of a precipice —Honore dé Balzac
Frightened … like a man who is told he has a mortal illness, yet can cure it by jumping off a fifty-foot cliff into the water. “No,” he says, “I’ll stay in bed. I’d rather die.” —Norman Mailer
Frightening … like one of those films where ghostly hands suddenly reach in and switch off all the lights —Robert E. Sherwood
Fright stabbed his stomach like a sliver of glass —Arthur Miller
Full of dread and timidness as conscripts to a firing squad doing —Richard Ford
Gives me the creeps … like petting snakes —Raymond Chandler
Glances round him like a lamb at a convocation of wolves —T. Coraghessan Boyle
(Mildred’s) heart leapt with relief like a bird in her breast —Noël Coward
A hiss of terror, like air whistling out of a punctured tire —Cornell Woolrich
Horror should rise up like a clot of blood in the throat —Dylan Thomas
[A group of children] huddled in a corner … like so many wide-eyed, trembling mice —Gregory McDonald
I carry a scared silence with me like my smell —W. D. Snodgrass
I pretend that my right foot is like a bottle. I pour my fears down into the toes and cork the whole thing at the ankle, so none of my fears can escape into the rest of me —Dorothy B. Francis
My heart begins to pound like a thief s with the police after him —Isaac Bashevis Singer
My heart in my throat like a wad of sour grease —George Garrett
Panic, like a rabbit in front of the dogs —Peter Meinke
Panic rose as thick as honey in my throat —R. Wright Campbell
Panic shook her … as awful as if she had been tottering on a cliff in a roaring wind —Belva Plain
Panic that was like asphyxiation —Penelope Gilliatt
Ran terror-stricken, as if death were pursuing me —Aharon Megged
Scared as a piss ant —Anon
Scared … like a rabbit that spies a dog —Shelby Hearon
Shivered with fear like a thin dog in the cold —Stephen Vincent Benét
Take fear for granted like a drunken uncle —George Garrett
Terrifying, like a Samurai sword in motion —Robert Silverberg
Terrifying … like fingers clamped upon your throat —Beryl Markham
Terror ebbed like water from a basin —Julia O’Faolain
Terror … filled me as the sound of an explosion would fill a room —Scott Spencer
The terror inside him acted like radar —James Mitchell
Terror [of some hard to accomplish task] mocked, like some distant mountain peak —John Fowles
Terrors that brushed her like a curtain windblown against her back —Andre Dubus
(They) trail their fear behind them like a heavy shadow —Heinrich
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÍÑÈ
The art of war is like the art of the courtesan; indeed, they might be called sisters, since both are the slaves of desperation —Pietro Aretino
The beginning of war is like the first days of peace: neither the world nor our hearts know they are there —Jane Wagner
Being a soldier was like being on a team in a sport that drew no crowds, except for the players’ own parents and friends —Dan Wakefield
Great warriors, like great earthquakes, are principally remembered for the mischief they have done —Christian Nestell Bovee
Marrying in wartime is like sowing among thorns —Ignazio Silone See Also: MARRIAGE (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Marriage)
Success in war, like charity in religion, covers a multitude of sins —Lord Napier
War is like an aging actress; more and more dangerous, and less and less photogenic —Robert Capa
War will disappear, like the dinosaur, when changes in world conditions have destroyed its survival value —Robert A. Millikan
Went to war with an air, as if they went to a ball —Stephen Vincent Benét
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáßÑÇåíÉ
Dislike ran round the table like electricity —Penelope Gilliatt
Exuded venom like a malicious old lady —Colette
The greatest hatred, like the greatest virtue and the worst dogs, is silent —Jean Paul Richter
Hate … flowed like electric syrup through her veins —Marge Piercy
Hate is ptomaine, good-will is a panacea —Elbert Hubbard
Hating people is like burning down your own house to get rid of a rat —Harry Emerson Fosdick
Hatred fills my mouth like spit —Margaret Atwood
Hatred is a form of subjective involvement by which one is bound to the hated object —Lao Tzu
Hatred like fire; it makes even light rubbish deadly —George Elliott
Hatreds, like chickens, come home to roost —Joseph Shearing
He’ll (a hated individual) be getting into your beer, like prussic acid; and blotting out your eyes, like a cataract; and screaming in your ears, like a brain tumor; and boiling around your heart, like melted lead; and ramping through your guts, like a cancer —Joyce Cary
I hate you like all-fire —Truman Capote
(Lady Charlotte would swallow back her hot feeling against Cynthia.) It [hate] was like a dark web within her, a fibrous tangle like the roots of plants in too small a pot —M. J. Farrell
My hate is like ripe fruit —Marvin Bell
The pleasure of hating, like a poisonous mineral, eats into the heart of religion and turns it to rankling spleen and bigotry —William Hazlitt
In his essay, [I]The Pleasures of Hating, Hazlitt continues to describe the effects of hatred: “It makes patriotism an excuse for carrying fire, pestilence, and famine into other lands; it leaves to virtue nothing but the spirit of censoriousness.”
Promiscuous haters get religion as promiscuous lovers get clap —Gerald Kersh
Spite may often see as clearly as charity —Lawrence Durrell
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÔÌÇÚÉ
Adventurous as a bee —William Wordsworth
As brave as hell —Petronius
As much backbone as an eel —American colloquialism
As much backbone as cooked spaghetti —Harry Prince
(There was) a tragic daring about her, like a moth dancing around a flame —Paige Mitchell
(He died) bold as brass —George Parker
Common usage has seeded modern-day modifications such as “Bold as brass balls.”
Bold as a dying saint —Elkanah Settle
Bold as a lion —The Holy Bible/Proverbs
Bold as an unhunted fawn —Percy Bysshe Shelley
Bold as love —Edmond Gosse
Bold as Paul in the presence of Agrippa —William Cowper
Brave as a barrel full of bears —Ogden Nash
Brave as a tiger in a rage —Ogden Nash
Brave as winds that brave the sea —Algernon Charles Swinburne
Courage is like a disobedient dog, once it starts running away it flies all the faster for your attempts to recall it —Katherine Mansfield
Courage is like love; it must have hope to nourish it —Napoleon Bonaparte
Courage, like cowardice, is undoubtedly contagious, but some persons are not liable to catch it —Archibald Prentice
Courage, on nearly all occasions, inflicts as much of evil as it imparts of good —Walter Savage Landor
Courageous as a poker player with a royal flush —Mike Sommer
Courageous like firemen. The bell rings and they jump into their boots and go down the pole —Anon
Daring as tickling a tiger —Anon
Fend off pressure like a sharkhunter feeds off danger —Anon
Gallant as a warrior —Beryl Markham
Grew bold, like a general who is about to order an assault —Guy de Maupassant
Have the gall of a shoplifter returning an item for a refund —W.I.E. Gates
Indomitable as a lioness —Aharon Appelfeld
A man without courage is like a knife without edge —Anon
More guts than a gladiator —William Diehl
Nothing so bold as a blind horse —Greek proverb
Over-daring is as great a vice as over-fearing —Ben Jonson
Show nerve of a burglar —Anon
Stand my ground brave as a bear —American country ballad “If You Want to Go A-Courting”
Valiant as a lion —William Shakespeare
This simile from Henry the Fourth has made lion comparisons part of our every day language. Another lion simile by the Bard is “Walked like one of the lions” from The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
With all the courage of an escaped convict —Honoré de Balzac
Valiant as Hercules —William Shakespeare
(I’ve seen plenty of great big tough guys that was as) yellow and soft as a stick of butter —George Garrett
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÍßãÉ æÇáÚáã æÇáÊÚáíãChewing over their combined worldly wisdom like so many puppies with a shoe —Mary Ladd Cavell
The wisdom in CavelPs story, The Rotifer, is being shared by three apartment mates.
The heart of the wise man lies quiet like limpid water —Cameroonian proverb
The heart of the wise, like a mirror, should reflect all objects, without being sullied —Confucius
If a man is as wise as a serpent, he can afford to be as harmless as a dove —Josh Billings
This is an elaboration of “Harmless as a dove” which dates back to the Bible. In Billings’ phonetic dialect this reads, “Iz az wize az a serpent.”
Insight as keen as frosty star —William Wordsworth
A learned man is a tank; a wise man is a spring —William R. Alger
String of wise jests … like gold links —Penelope Gilliatt
To learn a person’s life … like learning a language, you must start with the little things, the little pictures —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
Wisdom and virtue are like two wheels of a cart —Japanese proverb See Also: VIRTUE (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Virtue)
Wisdom in a poor man is like a diamond set in lead —H. G. Bohn’s Handbook of Proverbs
Wisdom is like fire: a little enlightens, much burns —Moses Ibn Ezra
Wisdom is like gold ore, mixed with stones and dust —Moses Ibn Ezra
Wisdom, like life itself, appeared to me to be comprised of continuing progress, of starting over again, of patience —Marguerite Yourcenar
Wisdom, like perfume, rises out of its own essence —Norman Mailer
Wisdom shook itself like a drop off a dog (and he lost it) —Cynthia Ozick
Wise as a wisp —George Garrett
Wise as heaven —Algernon Charles Swinburne
ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÇÚÏÇÁ
Pay attention to your enemies, for they are the first to discover your mistakes" [Antisthenes]
"You can discover what your enemy fears most by observing the means he uses to frighten you" [Eric Hoffer The Passionate State of Mind]
"A man cannot be too careful in the choice of his enemies" [Oscar Wilde Lady Windermere's Fan]
"A very great man once said you should love your enemies, and that's not a bad piece of advice. We can love them, but, by God, that doesn't mean we're not going to fight them" [Norman Schwarzkopf]
"The enemy advances, we retreat."
"The enemy camps, we harass."
"The enemy tires, we attack."
"The enemy retreats, we pursue" [Mao Zedong slogan for his troops]
"We have met the enemy and he is us" [Walt Kelly Pogo]
"Yet is every man his own greatest enemy, and as it were his own executioner" [Thomas Browne Religio Medici]
"If we could read the secret history of our enemies, we should find in each man's life sorrow and suffering enough to disarm all hostility" [Henry Wadsworth Longfellow Driftwood]
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÝÞÑ
Destitution, like a famished rat, begins by gnawing at the edges of garments —Stefan Zweig
Her poverty was like a huge dream-mountain on which her feet were fast rooted … aching with the ache of the size of the thing —Katherine Mansfield
(I felt as) poor as a Catholic without a sin for confession —Harry Prince
Poor as a church mouse —Anon
Like Job, mice (and rats) have long been, and continue to be, proverbial comparisons for poverty. The writer most frequently credited with originating the simile is William Makepeace Thackeray who used it in Vanity Fair
Poor as a couple of shithouse spiders —Leslie Thomas
Poor as Job —Anon
A simile with a history dating back to the thirteenth century, and used by many illustrious writers. In Henry IV, Shakespeare extended it to, “Poor as Job … but not so patient,” while Sir Walter Scott in The Fortunes of Nigel made it, “Proud as Lucifer, and as poor as Job.” A variation that was once a popular American colloquialism is “Poor as Job’s turkey.”
Poor as sin —F. Scott Fitzgerald
A poor man who oppresses the poor is like a sweeping rain which leaves no food —The Holy Bible/Proverbs
The words ‘oppresses’ and ‘leaves’ have been modernized from ‘oppresseth’ and ‘leaveth.’
Poverty is death in another form —Latin proverb
Poverty, like wealth, entails a ritual of adaptation —Arthur A. Cohen
Wearing squalor like a badge —Wilfrid Sheed
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tr.v. friend·ed, friend·ing, friends
1. To add (someone) as a friend on a social networking website.
2. Archaic To befriend.
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÝÑÍ joy
Agitated with delight as a waving sea —Arabian Nights
Exhilaration spread through his breast like some pleasurable form of heartburn —Nadine Gordimer
A joyous feeling … shot up, like the grass in spring —Ivan Turgenev
(Heart is) as full of sunshine as a hay field —Josh Billings
Bliss … as though you’d suddenly swallowed a bright piece of that late afternoon sun and it burned in your bosom, sending out a little shower of sparks into every particle —Katherine Mansfield
The simile sets the mood for one of Mansfield’s best known stories, Bliss.
Ecstacy warm and rich as wine —Harvey Swados
Elated … like a lion tamer who has at last found the whip ***** which will subdue the most ferocious of his big cats —John Mortimer
Enjoy life like a young porpoise —George Santayana
Gorged with joy like a pigeon too fat to fly —Marge Piercy
Great joys, like griefs, are silent —Shackerley Marmion
Gurgle like a meadowlark —W. P. Kinsella
Heart … soared like a geyser —William Peden
Her heart became as light as a bubble —Antonia White
Joy careens and smashes through them like a speeding car out of control —Irving Feldman
Joy … felt it rumbling within him like a subterranean river —André Malraux
Joyful as carollers —David Leavitt
Joy is like the ague [malaria]; one good day between two bad ones —Danish proverb
Joy leaping within me … like a trout in a brook —George Garrett
Joy rises in me like a summer morn —Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Joys are bubble-like; what makes them bursts them too —P. J. Bailey
Joy, simple as the wildflowers —George Garrett
Joys … like angel visits, short and bright —John Norris
The angel visit comparison has been as effectively linked to goodness and fame.
Joys met by chance … flow for us fresh and strong, like new wine when it gushes from the press —André Gide
The joys we’ve missed in youth are like … lost umbrellas; we musn’t spend the rest of life wondering where they are —Henry James
(He is) jubilant as a flag unfurled —Dorothy Parker
Men without joy seem like corpses —Kaethe Kolwitz
My heart lifted like a wave —Norman Mailer
Our joys are about me like a net —Iris Murdoch
Rose and fell, like a floating swimmer, on easygoing great waves of voluptuous joy —Christina Stead
A strong exhilaration ran through her like the fumes of wine —Ben Ames Williams
The sun in my heart comes up like a Javanese orange —Dylan Thomas
Their joys … ran into each other like water paints mingling to form delicate new colors —Sumner Locke Elliott
Triumphant as if I’d just hurled a shutout —W. P. Kinsella
The term shutout was particularly appropriate in Kinsella’s baseball novel, Shoeless Joe. Baseball expressions do, however, work well within other contexts.
A wonderful feeling enveloped him, as if light were being shaken about him —John
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÎæÝ
Afraid, as children in the dark —Dante Gabriel Rossetti
An air of terrifying finality, like the clap of doom —Herbert Lieberman
(A vague, uncatalogued) apprehension, as cold and disquieting as a first snowflake smudging the window of a warm and complacent room —Derek Lambert
As courage imperils life, fear protects it —Leonardo Da Vinci
As easily daunted as an elephant in the presence of a mouse —Ben Ames Williams
Brute terrors, like the scurrying of rats in a deserted attic, filled the more remote chambers of his brain —Robert Louis Stevenson
Cowardice, like alcoholism, is a lifelong condition —Susan Walton, New York Times/Hers, June 4, 1987
The cowardice Walton is comparing to alcoholism is that which drives the person who always does what is expected and when.
Cowardly as the hyena —Beryl Markham
His cowardice … fixed him like an invisible cement, or like a nail —Cynthia Ozick
Dreaded (her) like fire —Alexander Pushkin
The dread in his lungs lay heavy as cold mud —Peter Matthiessen
An eddy of fear swirled around her, like dust rising off the floor in some barren drafty place —Cornell Woolrich
Fear … a little like the fear of a lover who realizes that he is falling out of love —May Sarton
Fear … came and went like the throb of a nerve in an open tooth —James Warner Bellah
Fear … clutching at his heart … as if tigers were tearing him —Willa Cather
Fear … compressed me like a vise —Aharon Appelfeld
Fear fell [on crowd] like the shadow of a cloud —John Greenleaf Whittier
Fear … gnaws like pain —Dame Edith Sitwell
Fearing them as much … as a nervous child with memory filled with ghost-stories fears a dark room —W. H. Hudson
Fear is like a cloak which old men huddle about their love, as if to keep it warm —William Wordsworth
Fear … lay on me like a slab of stone —Norman Mailer
(In my body is a) fear like metal —Marilyn Hacker
The fear of failure … blew like a Siberian wind on our unprotected backs —John Le Carré
Fear oozed out (of the woods), as out of a *****ed bottle —Dorothy Canfield Fisher
Fear ran through him like a sickness —Brian Moore
Fears … fell from him like dreams from a man waking up in bed —G. K. Chesterton
Fear … sat heavy in the center of his body like a ball of badly digested food —George Garrett
Fears came scurrying out from their hiding places like mice —Paige Mitchell
Fear … seized all his bones like water —Hugh Walpole
Fear shot through me like a jolt of electricity —Sue Grafton
Fear spread like a common chill —Paige Mitchell
See Also: SPREADING (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Spreading)
The fear [of death]… stood silent behind them like an inflexible and cold-eyed taskmaster —Joseph Conrad
Fear stuck in his throat like a cotton hook —Charles Johnson
Fear swelled like some terrible travail —Heinrich Böll
Fear tangled his legs like a barricade —Harris Downey
Fear tastes like a rusty knife —John Cheever
Fear trills like an alarm bell you cannot shut off —John Updike
Fear worked like yeast in my thoughts, and the fermentation brought to the surface, in great gobs of scum, the images of disaster —Evelyn Waugh
Fear wrapped itself around his chest like a wide leather strap tightened by a maniac —François Camoin
Feeling as if an ice pick had been plunged into his liver —Peter Benchley
(I had) a feeling in my knees like a steering wheel with a shimmy —Rex Stout
Feel like clammy fingers were poking at my very heart —Borden Deal
Feel like a tight-rope walk high over hell —Kenneth Fearing
Feels fear, like a water bubble in his throat —Jessie Schell
Felt a chill … like swimming into a cold pocket in a lake —Tobias Wolff
Felt a driblet of fear … like a glug of water backing up the momentarily opened drain and polluting the bath with a dead spider, three lice, a rat turd, and things he couldn’t stand to name or look at —Bernard Malamud
Felt like a deer stepping out before the rifle of the hunter —Piers Anthony
Felt like a nightmare that had yet to be dreamt —Stanislaw J. Lem
Felt (the beginning of) panic, like a giant hand squeezing my heart —Frank Conroy
Felt panicky, like he was in a bad dream where he did and said all the wrong things and couldn’t stop —Dan Wakefield
Felt the chill of mortality … like a toddler gifted with some scraping edge of adult comprehension —Penelope Gilliatt
See Also: DEATH (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Death)
Felt the sick, oppressive crush of dread, like pinpoint ashes —Sylvia Berkman
A foreboding, dusky and cold like the room, crept to her side —Hugh Walpole
Frightened as Macbeth before the ghost of Banquo —Louis Veuillot
Frightened as though he had suddenly found himself at the edge of a precipice —Honore dé Balzac
Frightened … like a man who is told he has a mortal illness, yet can cure it by jumping off a fifty-foot cliff into the water. “No,” he says, “I’ll stay in bed. I’d rather die.” —Norman Mailer
Frightening … like one of those films where ghostly hands suddenly reach in and switch off all the lights —Robert E. Sherwood
Fright stabbed his stomach like a sliver of glass —Arthur Miller
Full of dread and timidness as conscripts to a firing squad doing —Richard Ford
Gives me the creeps … like petting snakes —Raymond Chandler
Glances round him like a lamb at a convocation of wolves —T. Coraghessan Boyle
(Mildred’s) heart leapt with relief like a bird in her breast —Noël Coward
A hiss of terror, like air whistling out of a punctured tire —Cornell Woolrich
Horror should rise up like a clot of blood in the throat —Dylan Thomas
[A group of children] huddled in a corner … like so many wide-eyed, trembling mice —Gregory McDonald
I carry a scared silence with me like my smell —W. D. Snodgrass
I pretend that my right foot is like a bottle. I pour my fears down into the toes and cork the whole thing at the ankle, so none of my fears can escape into the rest of me —Dorothy B. Francis
My heart begins to pound like a thief s with the police after him —Isaac Bashevis Singer
My heart in my throat like a wad of sour grease —George Garrett
Panic, like a rabbit in front of the dogs —Peter Meinke
Panic rose as thick as honey in my throat —R. Wright Campbell
Panic shook her … as awful as if she had been tottering on a cliff in a roaring wind —Belva Plain
Panic that was like asphyxiation —Penelope Gilliatt
Ran terror-stricken, as if death were pursuing me —Aharon Megged
Scared as a piss ant —Anon
Scared … like a rabbit that spies a dog —Shelby Hearon
Shivered with fear like a thin dog in the cold —Stephen Vincent Benét
Take fear for granted like a drunken uncle —George Garrett
Terrifying, like a Samurai sword in motion —Robert Silverberg
Terrifying … like fingers clamped upon your throat —Beryl Markham
Terror ebbed like water from a basin —Julia O’Faolain
Terror … filled me as the sound of an explosion would fill a room —Scott Spencer
The terror inside him acted like radar —James Mitchell
Terror [of some hard to accomplish task] mocked, like some distant mountain peak —John Fowles
Terrors that brushed her like a curtain windblown against her back —Andre Dubus
(They) trail their fear behind them like a heavy shadow —Heinrich
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The art of war is like the art of the courtesan; indeed, they might be called sisters, since both are the slaves of desperation —Pietro Aretino
The beginning of war is like the first days of peace: neither the world nor our hearts know they are there —Jane Wagner
Being a soldier was like being on a team in a sport that drew no crowds, except for the players’ own parents and friends —Dan Wakefield
Great warriors, like great earthquakes, are principally remembered for the mischief they have done —Christian Nestell Bovee
Marrying in wartime is like sowing among thorns —Ignazio Silone See Also: MARRIAGE (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Marriage)
Success in war, like charity in religion, covers a multitude of sins —Lord Napier
War is like an aging actress; more and more dangerous, and less and less photogenic —Robert Capa
War will disappear, like the dinosaur, when changes in world conditions have destroyed its survival value —Robert A. Millikan
Went to war with an air, as if they went to a ball —Stephen Vincent Benét
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Dislike ran round the table like electricity —Penelope Gilliatt
Exuded venom like a malicious old lady —Colette
The greatest hatred, like the greatest virtue and the worst dogs, is silent —Jean Paul Richter
Hate … flowed like electric syrup through her veins —Marge Piercy
Hate is ptomaine, good-will is a panacea —Elbert Hubbard
Hating people is like burning down your own house to get rid of a rat —Harry Emerson Fosdick
Hatred fills my mouth like spit —Margaret Atwood
Hatred is a form of subjective involvement by which one is bound to the hated object —Lao Tzu
Hatred like fire; it makes even light rubbish deadly —George Elliott
Hatreds, like chickens, come home to roost —Joseph Shearing
He’ll (a hated individual) be getting into your beer, like prussic acid; and blotting out your eyes, like a cataract; and screaming in your ears, like a brain tumor; and boiling around your heart, like melted lead; and ramping through your guts, like a cancer —Joyce Cary
I hate you like all-fire —Truman Capote
(Lady Charlotte would swallow back her hot feeling against Cynthia.) It [hate] was like a dark web within her, a fibrous tangle like the roots of plants in too small a pot —M. J. Farrell
My hate is like ripe fruit —Marvin Bell
The pleasure of hating, like a poisonous mineral, eats into the heart of religion and turns it to rankling spleen and bigotry —William Hazlitt
In his essay, [I]The Pleasures of Hating, Hazlitt continues to describe the effects of hatred: “It makes patriotism an excuse for carrying fire, pestilence, and famine into other lands; it leaves to virtue nothing but the spirit of censoriousness.”
Promiscuous haters get religion as promiscuous lovers get clap —Gerald Kersh
Spite may often see as clearly as charity —Lawrence Durrell
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Adventurous as a bee —William Wordsworth
As brave as hell —Petronius
As much backbone as an eel —American colloquialism
As much backbone as cooked spaghetti —Harry Prince
(There was) a tragic daring about her, like a moth dancing around a flame —Paige Mitchell
(He died) bold as brass —George Parker
Common usage has seeded modern-day modifications such as “Bold as brass balls.”
Bold as a dying saint —Elkanah Settle
Bold as a lion —The Holy Bible/Proverbs
Bold as an unhunted fawn —Percy Bysshe Shelley
Bold as love —Edmond Gosse
Bold as Paul in the presence of Agrippa —William Cowper
Brave as a barrel full of bears —Ogden Nash
Brave as a tiger in a rage —Ogden Nash
Brave as winds that brave the sea —Algernon Charles Swinburne
Courage is like a disobedient dog, once it starts running away it flies all the faster for your attempts to recall it —Katherine Mansfield
Courage is like love; it must have hope to nourish it —Napoleon Bonaparte
Courage, like cowardice, is undoubtedly contagious, but some persons are not liable to catch it —Archibald Prentice
Courage, on nearly all occasions, inflicts as much of evil as it imparts of good —Walter Savage Landor
Courageous as a poker player with a royal flush —Mike Sommer
Courageous like firemen. The bell rings and they jump into their boots and go down the pole —Anon
Daring as tickling a tiger —Anon
Fend off pressure like a sharkhunter feeds off danger —Anon
Gallant as a warrior —Beryl Markham
Grew bold, like a general who is about to order an assault —Guy de Maupassant
Have the gall of a shoplifter returning an item for a refund —W.I.E. Gates
Indomitable as a lioness —Aharon Appelfeld
A man without courage is like a knife without edge —Anon
More guts than a gladiator —William Diehl
Nothing so bold as a blind horse —Greek proverb
Over-daring is as great a vice as over-fearing —Ben Jonson
Show nerve of a burglar —Anon
Stand my ground brave as a bear —American country ballad “If You Want to Go A-Courting”
Valiant as a lion —William Shakespeare
This simile from Henry the Fourth has made lion comparisons part of our every day language. Another lion simile by the Bard is “Walked like one of the lions” from The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
With all the courage of an escaped convict —Honoré de Balzac
Valiant as Hercules —William Shakespeare
(I’ve seen plenty of great big tough guys that was as) yellow and soft as a stick of butter —George Garrett
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ÞÇáæÇ Úä ÇáÍßãÉ æÇáÚáã æÇáÊÚáíãChewing over their combined worldly wisdom like so many puppies with a shoe —Mary Ladd Cavell
The wisdom in CavelPs story, The Rotifer, is being shared by three apartment mates.
The heart of the wise man lies quiet like limpid water —Cameroonian proverb
The heart of the wise, like a mirror, should reflect all objects, without being sullied —Confucius
If a man is as wise as a serpent, he can afford to be as harmless as a dove —Josh Billings
This is an elaboration of “Harmless as a dove” which dates back to the Bible. In Billings’ phonetic dialect this reads, “Iz az wize az a serpent.”
Insight as keen as frosty star —William Wordsworth
A learned man is a tank; a wise man is a spring —William R. Alger
String of wise jests … like gold links —Penelope Gilliatt
To learn a person’s life … like learning a language, you must start with the little things, the little pictures —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
Wisdom and virtue are like two wheels of a cart —Japanese proverb See Also: VIRTUE (http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Virtue)
Wisdom in a poor man is like a diamond set in lead —H. G. Bohn’s Handbook of Proverbs
Wisdom is like fire: a little enlightens, much burns —Moses Ibn Ezra
Wisdom is like gold ore, mixed with stones and dust —Moses Ibn Ezra
Wisdom, like life itself, appeared to me to be comprised of continuing progress, of starting over again, of patience —Marguerite Yourcenar
Wisdom, like perfume, rises out of its own essence —Norman Mailer
Wisdom shook itself like a drop off a dog (and he lost it) —Cynthia Ozick
Wise as a wisp —George Garrett
Wise as heaven —Algernon Charles Swinburne