How To Use Liken In A Sentence

  • Some paragliding pilots liken their sport to paddling a Class V river while blindfolded.
  • But to be fair to him, he kept his aplomb and asked me, with great seriousness, if the representation was a true and proportionate likeness. GALILEE
  • Most Protestants only get as far as calling Catholic statues and icons a likeness.
  • In the past year alone, numerous studies have highlighted our remarkable likeness not only to chimps, but to monkeys and apes of all kinds.
  • There's a definite likeness there, don't you think, Arethusa ? DEVIL'S BRIDE
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  • It has been long known as a patrician, white-shoe firm with an air so understated and secretive that at least one former exec likened it to working at the CIA.
  • For some eerie reason I am reminded of a passage in the bible where it talks of the Anti-Christ being made into the likeness of man …. perhaps corporate personhood is what this passage really meant? Think Progress » Corporations Speak Out Against SCOTUS Ruling, Call On Congress To Approve Public Financing Of Campaigns
  • They are shockingly gracile and incredibly long-bodied, with a shape that (when seen in dorsal view) has been likened to that of a champagne flute. A 6 ton model, and a baby that puts on 90 kg a day: rorquals part I
  • I've likened it to looking at your grandfather when your grandmother has just passed away. Times, Sunday Times
  • And he who were pleasantly disposed could not well avoid to liken it to the exploit of that gallant man who thought to pound up the crows by shutting his park gate.
  • But they'd get an Identikit or whatever they called it, use computer imaging under her direction, and they'd get a likeness. DOLL'S EYES
  • Like most dandies, his predilection for high-style fashion and cosmetic beauty betrays a likeness to his female counterparts.
  • Sami initially sees his love for Muntaha in poetic terms, likening her beauty and allure to the Sumerian artefacts in front of which he first encounters her, an orientalization that is later echoed by Gabor. The Jakarta Post Breaking News
  • An amorphous polymer in this state has been likened to a plate of frozen spaghetti.
  • Last July I likened Mr Obama to a chess master playing several games simultaneously.
  • She has a remarkable likeness to an unknown figure who appears in his recurrent dreams, a fact that Paul takes as some sort of omen.
  • My analogy regarding giving more tax dollars to Congress, likening it to heroin addiction, is quite apt. Matthew Yglesias » Conservatives Don’t Care About the Deficit
  • That the portraits of Beethoven did not bear much likeness to the composer could be deemed a deliberate transgression.
  • One likened his performance to'a paranormal phenomena '. Times, Sunday Times
  • Doctor Sachs likens his surgery to an artist conducting a symphony and has appeared on TV.
  • Kerr tells his audiences that the explosion blew him about 30 yards from where he was standing, and likens the impact to being hit by a truck.
  • If there is any likeness at all between the machine and its embodied precursor, the closest analogy to that relationship might be between adults and the babies they once were.
  • Naturally, their parents thought the photograph was the worst likeness they had seen. Times, Sunday Times
  • Flanked by a bodyguard and disguised in a hat, mask and glasses, he spoke through a modulator that led Washington Post columnist David Ignatius to liken his voice to Darth Vader's.
  • One critic likened it to a titanic High Mass on Mars.
  • James Carville thought it was appropriate to liken Bill Richardson to Judas who sold out Jesus for 30 pieces of silver when he endorsed Barack Obama and reiterated his incongruous biblical analogy on CNN by saying that Richardson was being "disloyal" - not to the country, but to the Clintons. Sam Sedaei: The Price of Loyalty
  • He likens it to a marriage, spiked with petulant tiffs, where affection has cooled into mutual respect and where the partners are increasingly living apart together.
  • Life can be likened to a journey with an unknown destination.
  • Rather than achieving a photorealistic likeness, I try to capture the feeling I get from a mental visualization of my subject.
  • From the caves of Lascaux to the clay or stone figures made by primitives and modernists, animal likenesses or essences have abounded in humankind's representational practices.
  • They were often likened to the clergy in this regard. A Social History of Modern Spain
  • ---the procedures we use may be likened to a very controlled chemical burn, which produces changes in the dermis and the epidermis. COLDHEART CANYON
  • misspent" youth at the old Billiken Bowl on Stedman Street. Undefined
  • An informer who denounces someone to the government to be killed, imprisoned, or even fined is likened to an assailant, since being arrested can be a dangerous and traumatic experience.
  • The soul forms in itself likenesses of things inasmuch as, through the light of agent intellect, forms abstracted from sensible objects are made actually intelligible, so as to be received in the possible intellect.
  • Dont "liken" yourself to the president now! lol ... Steele says he has 'slimmer margin' for error
  • I had opened it at a Gnostic Hymn that told of a certain King’s son who, being exiled, slept in Egypt—a symbol of the natural state—and how an Angel while he slept brought him a royal mantle; and at the bottom of the page I found a footnote saying that the word mantle did not represent the meaning properly, for that which the Angel gave had the exile’s own form and likeness. Collected Works of W. B. Yeats Volume III Autobiographies
  • His TV face was once likened to an undertaker's assistant. The Sun
  • Originally, all of these acts were a form of spirituality—of godlikeness. God is Not a Christian, Nor a Jew, Muslim, Hindu …
  • It's not about producing a good likeness but going over the motions. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the nighttime version, by contrast, violent white lines cross the image in all directions, obfuscating a washed-out bed of flowers reduced to a symbolic recollection of its previous likeness.
  • From the bloody hematoma on his forehead to the true Manchu beard-mustache combo, bloody cuts on his body and guaranteed-to-offend tattoos, this seven-inch tall likeness of the late punker best known for using the stage as a toilet, performing naked and attacking his fans is for the hardcore only. Boing Boing
  • Life has often been likened to a journey.
  • For all I know Ayers has relief sculptures of their likenesses in alto-rilievo style over the portal of his seminar room, and I don’t doubt for a minute that he’s a terrific classroom teacher). April « 2007 « Bill Ayers
  • The tracing of likenesses quickly becomes rabbinism, almost cabalism. A Book of Prefaces
  • This is the work of Johann Beringer, professor in the University of Wurzburg and private physician to the Prince-Bishop -- the treatise bearing the title Lithographiae Wirceburgensis Specimen Primum, "illustrated with the marvellous likenesses of two hundred figured or rather insectiform stones. A History of the warfare of Science with Theology in Christendom
  • He likens the maladies of a state to the hectic fever.
  • While in Plato there is the foreshadowing of the truth that the goal of moral endeavour lies in godlikeness, with Aristotle the goal is confined to this life and is conceived simply as the earthly well-being of the moral subject. Christianity and Ethics A Handbook of Christian Ethics
  • If we used Messiah, the Disciples, and the first followers of the risen Savior as our examples we may find ourselves ashamed at our actual lack of "Christlikeness". Latest Articles
  • Many likened the incident to the "Day of Camels" clashes in Tahrir Square on Feb. 2, when allegedly paid "baltagiya," or thugs—some of whom rode horses and camels—marauded through an antiregime rally in a last-ditch effort to violently break up demonstrations without using official force. Cairo Clashes Show Backlash
  • Keck Observatory atop Mauna Kea on the Big Island suggest a warm polar vortex - a large-scale weather pattern likened to a jet stream on Earth that occurs in the upper atmosphere.
  • On the eve of departure, many forty-niners also visited the daguerreian studio to have a ‘likeness’ or two taken for their closest and best-loved female companions, their mothers, wives and sweethearts.
  • Just as we have often made God in our own image and likeness, we now may run the risk of being shaped by machines we have created.
  • In lieu of buckles at his knees, he wore unequal loops of packthread; and in his grimy hands he held a knotted stick, the knob of which was carved into a rough likeness of his own vile face. Barnaby Rudge
  • There are some people who I have come across in life, I had started to dislike them first time I met and that dislikeness just grow day by day for no apparent reason. Yahoo! Answers: Latest Questions
  • In a 1998 speech, Gore likened opposition to affirmative action to a duck blind.
  • The kami can be likened to nature spirits, and Shinto shrines are usually found in areas of natural beauty.
  • They could be likened to the dynamic force of a volcanic eruption.
  • But if she had to liken him to anything it would be an overgrown teddy bear in determined pursuit of his honey.
  • One attendee likened the atmosphere at the conference to a hangover after the big party that was 2004.
  • Companies that care about the packaging often liken themselves to book publishers, who know a small number of people will pay a premium price for a hardback. Times, Sunday Times
  • Small wonder that orgasm has so often been likened to decease and gets referred to as the petit mort or little death. BREAKFAST WITH SOCRATES
  • I actually liken you to Tom Lloyd and Don Juan, two newly joined knuckle dragging monosynaptic fools that couldn't put a rational thought together even working in tandem. Home
  • a wrong representation, nor mislead us from the true apprehension of anything, by its dislikeness to it: and such, excepting those of substances, are all our complex ideas. An Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • In the last part of your article you liken the act of music piracy to the theft of physical property.
  • I can't see much likeness between him and his father.
  • They learned fairly to live in the perfunctory; they remained in it as many hours of the day as might be; it took on finally the likeness of some spacious central chamber in a haunted house, a great overarched and overglazed rotunda, where gaiety might reign, but the doors of which opened into sinister circular passages. The Golden Bowl — Complete
  • But all I experience are the symptoms of withdrawal from the self I have labored a lifetime to create -- what the medieval Cistercians called "the land of unlikeness" hiding the true self that Scripture says is created in God's image. Retreat Into Silence
  • Then Huysmans really hits his stride, likening whisky to trombones, "raising the roof of the mouth" with their blare. Do They Taste of Trumpets?
  • Magistrate from his subordinates, and this fence, being made of long splinters of wood placed diagonally, was called _cancellus_, from its likeness to network, the regular Latin word for a net being casses, and the diminutive cancellus [177]. The Letters of Cassiodorus Being A Condensed Translation Of The Variae Epistolae Of Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus Senator
  • In our image, after our likeness I do not scrupulously insist upon the particles B+, (beth,) and K+, (caph [90]) I know not whether there is anything solid in the opinion of some who hold that this is said, because the image of God was only shadowed forth in man till he should arrive at his perfection. Commentary on Genesis - Volume 1
  • The argument begins with human nature, made, according to Genesis, in the image and likeness of God.
  • In a terrestrial context this scenario might be likened to gazelles, wildebeests, and lions gathering around a watering hole.
  • Hence the name ‘crane's bill ’, so-called because of the plant's likeness to the bird's long, slender beak.
  • Likened to bimbos, or called vapid, or whatever else? Renegade Evolution
  • It's odd though to be in a building with all of those faces, who for some reason or another have left their mark, who have become iconic enough for postcards of their likeness to be peddled to tourists.
  • She sent me photos but I can't see any likeness. The Sun
  • The word ‘difference’ can be a quality or condition of being different, an instance of unlikeness, a specific point that constitutes a difference, or a distinct mark.
  • The game - sometimes with a game board, sometimes without - consisted of decks of lithographed cards on which were depicted comical or serious likenesses of women in pairs and a single ‘Old Maid.’
  • The three roles are most often given to actors of great range and technical virtuosity so that the average playgoer is more aware of their utter unlikeness to himself than of what he has in common with them.
  • She says the artist's impression is an excellent likeness of her abductor.
  • It likens it to now common reproductive technologies such as in vitro fertilization and artificial insemination.
  • Along with their other accessories, the warriors' elaborate dress suggests that they brought both wealth and pageantry to combat, which Donnan likens to medieval jousts.
  • The prince's Romanov-style beard may be designed to hide a bobsleighing scar but he turns heads wherever he goes in Russia because of his physical likeness to Tsar Nicholas II, the cousin of King George V, his grandfather.
  • For God has absolute and paramount lordship over the creature wholly and singly, which is entirely subject to His power: whereas man partakes of a certain likeness to the divine lordship, forasmuch as he exercises a particular power over some man or creature. Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) Translated by Fathers of the English Dominican Province
  • Deploying his amazing deductive powers on crude earlier representations he elicited a likeness which the Emperor sharply recognised.
  • Long before realistic portrait painting developed in Europe in the Renaissance, Roman-Egyptian artists did striking likenesses in wax on limewood. Egyptian Mummy Portraits
  • He likens the situation to be being attached to a piece of elastic constantly pinging him back to his family's enduring pain. The Sun
  • And there was afterwards writ a proper and careful treatise, and did set out that there did be ruptures of the Æther, the which did constitute doorways, as those more fanciful ones did name them; and through these shatterings, which might be likened unto openings -- there being no better word to their naming -- there did come into this Particular Condition Of Life, those Monstrous Forces Of Evil, that did dominate the Night, and which many did hold surely to have been given this improper entrance through the foolish and unwise wisdom of those olden men of learning, that did meddle overfar with matters that did reach in the end beyond their understanding. The Night Land: Chapter 7
  • Managing director Paul Grant believes the company's growth since its beginnings in 1995 can be likened to the success of a certain well-known brand of shortbread.
  • The children all share strong family likeness.
  • Your fenceless cattle herding experience probably sound familiar to those managing educationalists - often likened to herding cats! Blogs as knowledge management
  • He could account for his isolation, his unlikeness to everything that existed around him. Marilynne Robinson: Religion, Science and the Ultimate Nature of Reality
  • He likened this to asking an artisan to explain how the convex surface of a peg can possibly fill that of a concave hole.
  • He is conciliatory and self-deprecating, likening himself to a bottom-dwelling scavenger fish called a loach. Yahoo! News: Business - Opinion
  • She grinned involuntarily, amused by his likeness to her high school maths teacher.
  • ---the procedures we use may be likened to a very controlled chemical burn, which produces changes in the dermis and the epidermis. COLDHEART CANYON
  • He decided to create beings made in His image and likeness, and fill them with the gift of His life-giving love, it is within a woman's being -- within her heart and soul -- where His love first established a foundation and home. Liturgy
  • If we set out with that high ideal which would seem to be demanded as a characteristic of a great religious teacher, and certainly of one claiming to be a prophet of God, we ought to expect that his character would steadily improve in all purity, humanity, truthfulness, charity, and godlikeness. Oriental Religions and Christianity A Course of Lectures Delivered on the Ely Foundation Before the Students of Union Theological Seminary, New York, 1891
  • Life is often likened to a journey.
  • The particle approach to writing is based on a philosophy of teaching and learning that has been likened to an assembly line.
  • Golf had hardly come in, and when one wasn't playing cricket, and the spilliken set had been mislaid, and tiddley-winks was voted too rough, a couple of sets or so was rather fun. Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 147, August 26th, 1914
  • NHS dental care in Yorkshire has been likened to that in a Third World country.
  • For the Godhead of Christ was covered and hidden under the likeness of man.
  • Therefore she loves thy likeness, e'en as I love Bane's likeness. Here There Are Monsters
  • God were to radiate and shine; therefore, they are likened to two candlesticks: the candlestick is the abode of the light, and from it the light shines forth. Some Answered Questions
  • Delving into the mystical aspect of Ninjitsu, the Ninja summons a perfect replica of her likeness in order to confuse her enemies.
  • He likened his trail-blazing approach to being the first to jump into a swimming pool, so encouraging others to follow. Times, Sunday Times
  • The task of igniting a scramjet, with air going through the engine at supersonic speed, has been likened to lighting a match in a hurricane.
  • ---the procedures we use may be likened to a very controlled chemical burn, which produces changes in the dermis and the epidermis. COLDHEART CANYON
  • This consists of a nest of polished steel tubes that have been likened both to organ pipes and to the pine trunks of the Finnish forests.
  • Nor, as he had before thankfully observed, did her ladyship enamel her nails to the likeness of blood-stained talons.
  • A figure drawing or painting is not a portrait, so an accurate facial likeness isn't essential.
  • Her voice is deep and husky enough for some unkind folk to liken it to a man's. Times, Sunday Times
  • So I determined I would not send it, indeed, I promised them I would not send it; but, notwithstanding, as I know Miss Russell will be good enough to comply with my conditions, I will send it directly; for, as it is a good likeness, every one except the family knowing it instantly, and Mr. Allston saying that it is a _very strong likeness_, it will on that account be a gratification to her. Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume I.
  • sketched in an approximate likeness
  • As Warwick passed the door that led from the garden, he brushed by a young man, the baudekin stripes of whose vest announced his relationship to the king, and who, though far less majestic than Edward, possessed sufficient of family likeness to pass for a very handsome and comely person; but his countenance wanted the open and fearless expression which gave that of the king so masculine and heroic a character. The Last of the Barons — Complete
  • Between him and Millikin, his brother-in-law, there was not much sympathy: for he pronounced Mr. Milliken to be what is called a muff; and had never been familiar with his elder sister Lavinia, of whose poems he had a mean opinion, and who used to tease and worry him by teaching him French, and telling tales of him to his mamma, when he was a schoolboy home for the holidays. The Christmas Books of Mr. M.A. Titmarsh
  • After a consideration of the various activities of Councils in relation to the sacred liturgy down the ages, Reid noted that their "authority is not positivistic: Councils do not re-make the Sacred Liturgy in their own image and likeness or indeed in that of some ‘straw modern man.’ Dr. Alcuin Reid at the Toronto Oratory
  • He calls the panning of Yellow Dog "souring" and likens it to "having flu for a week". The Guardian World News
  • Many critics felt that the sense of likeness gained through the use of contemporary dress diminished gradually as time went by and fashions changed.
  • Snooki is also "yowling" and "not conventionally attractive," and is likened variously to Reader - MassLive.com
  • He likens himself to the Puritan divines he studied in graduate school, whose religious scruples were part of their confession of faith.
  • One of the sources likened it to "greenmail," the Wall Street term that refers to payments made to hostile investors to go away. Boston Business News - Local Boston News | Boston Business Journal
  • Its flavour has been likened to a cross between a Brazil nut and a macadamia nut.
  • As a painter, he had the ability to produce a likeness in a single one-hour sitting.
  • They sought regeneration - a regeneration we can liken to that of the medieval heretic or saint.
  • The final version of this enigmatic character is in one sense an embodiment of Christian gentleness, but it is a gentleness deeply flawed by lack of self-knowledge, confused desire and passivity – an ironic picture which reflects what some would indeed see as Christlikeness, yet incorporates an oblique recognition of something like a Nietzschean critique of Christianity as dealing in unrealities and depending on the resentment of the weak. Clark Lectures, Trinity College, Cambridge Grace, Necessity and Imagination: Catholic Philosophy and the Twentieth Century Artist Lecture 4: God and the Artist
  • As a result we acquire some likeness to the Father and the Creator of all.
  • Except for a few publicity shots, any other pictures and likenesses of me as result from that show were specifically not included in the contract.
  • Swiss actor, Bruno Ganz, portrays Hitler, and is said to achieve a photographic likeness of the stooped, 56-year-old dictator, who was plagued by Parkinson's disease.
  • Visitors will be shown how to build their own microscope that will allow them to see the creatures' likeness to bears. Times, Sunday Times
  • Joanna bears a strong likeness to her father.
  • A few people around me laughed and one woman leaned over to me and said, "Don't lose your childlikeness. Archive 2007-02-01
  • And his catwalk shows have often been likened to performance art. Times, Sunday Times
  • Worse, the notion of "man" would need an interpretation characterized by exceeding liberality to accommodate any likeness of the branchy, spiny, mandibled things that pulled her down through a deep fissure. Locust Valley Breakdown
  • Disappointingly, even though you can at times detect a family likeness to its genius predecessors, The IT Crowd's opening gambit suggests it could be the runt of the litter.
  • She caught his likeness with a few bold brush strokes.
  • And in the life which is begotten of life, i.e. in the essence which is born of essence, seeing that it is not born unlike (and that because life is of life), He keeps in Himself a nature wholly similar to His original, because there is no diversity in the likeness of the essence that is born and that begets, that is, of the life which is possessed and which has been given. NPNF2-09. Hilary of Poitiers, John of Damascus
  • At 76, age has worked around him, not swallowed him whole, softening him from his photo likeness, freckling the skin and hands, pulling at the neck and hooding the eyes.
  • She likens her pieces to miniature abstract paintings - each one is an individual.
  • It is important to note that it is homonymous with Ruvu's * Mulungu, "Creator" and its likeness has resulted in some wrinkles in the ethnographic record because investigators commonly did not recognize the distinction between * mulungu the "potentially evil spirit" versus * Mulungu "Creator. Societies, Religion, and History: Central East Tanzanians and the World They Created, c. 200 BCE to 1800 CE
  • What happens can be likened to Sisyphus´ endlessly rolling his stone up the slope, but in this case finding that the slope beyond the crest is also an uphill one. Press Release: The 1997 Nobel Prize in Physics
  • He likened text message poetry to haikus, the ancient Japanese art of writing three-line poems.
  • Then to make the sight perfect, these things are needful, that is to wit, the cause efficient, the limb of the eye convenient to the thing that shall be seen, the air that bringeth the likeness to the eye, and taking heed, and easy moving. Mediaeval Lore from Bartholomew Anglicus
  • But if he makes the noble gesture, a thankful nation will always remember a man made in the likeness of his illustrious grand-aunt, Constance.
  • The mayor has likened Montreal to a bombed-out city, claiming parking lots ‘shamefully disfigure’ the city's downtown core.
  • From common form seem to originate beauty and deformity; and, as they recede from each other in opposite directions, they become less and less like their parent, _common form_, but never totally unlike; for it is their likeness to that form that constitutes the one beauty, and the other deformity; for, were there no resemblance in deformity to the common form, it would be a different species, and no longer disgust; and none in beauty, it would no longer please. An Enquiry Concerning the Principles of Taste, and of the Origin of our Ideas of Beauty, etc.
  • It's telling that Margie Gillis likens her ‘inside-out’ approach to modern dance performance to a primal argument.
  • He likened the situation to a football club charging high ticket prices and then playing its reserve team. Times, Sunday Times
  • But with his neatly combed blond hair there is a likeness to dad Wills. The Sun
  • It was a faithful likeness of the movie poster for Jurassic Park, with that distinctive script spelling out "When lizards ruled the earth", but instead of a Tyrannosaurus Rex, the marauder was a massive fanged gecko looking for something to devour. MORE FROM GINNY BATES: ALLIE
  • The artist limned a good likeness of his wife.
  • The main reason why I'm sick of them is that I literally see them everywhere through the insipid pervasiveness of merchandized products bearing their likenesses. Die, Marvel Zombies, die! Er, again. | Comics Should Be Good! @ Comic Book Resources
  • And other be in Ethiopia, and each of them have only one foot so great and so large, that they beshadow themselves with the foot when they lie gaping on the ground in strong heat of the sun; and yet they be so swift, that they be likened to hounds in swiftness of running, and therefore among the Greeks they be called Cynopodes. Mediaeval Lore from Bartholomew Anglicus
  • But to be fair to him, he kept his aplomb and asked me, with great seriousness, if the representation was a true and proportionate likeness. GALILEE
  • He spent most of three days carving a piece of ivory into a likeness of the snowy owl. The Broken God
  • Companies that care about the packaging often liken themselves to book publishers, who know a small number of people will pay a premium price for a hardback. Times, Sunday Times
  • Some people are criticizing last night's presidential debate, including Barack Obama, who likened it to what he calls gotcha games. CNN Transcript Apr 17, 2008
  • But the overriding likeness is the fun, almost absurdist sense of humor.
  • Upon this granite hd a master mason was fashioning the likeness of the mummiform Pharaoh, with his arms crossed and the crook and flail gripped in his dead hands. River God
  • The aging man didn't seem to mind company while he carved the stone into the likenesses of his father and sister.
  • Therefore she loves thy likeness, e'en as I love Bane's likeness. Here There Are Monsters
  • To get the correct likeness of Naples we merely reduce the priests by one-half and increase the beggars by two-thirds; we richen the color masses, thicken the dirt, raise the smells to the Nth degree, and set half the populace to singing. Europe Revised
  • Summoned to Paris, Canova began the sculpture in 1802 by modelling Napoleon's likeness; he finished the statue in Rome in 1806.
  • Combining text with a sculptured likeness and appropriate symbols in an everlasting material, medals could be distributed widely for lasting glory.
  • Yogic meditation allowed Vedic sages to see in their minds' eyes, the likenesses, homologies and equivalences between the cosmic, the terrestrial and the spiritual.
  • Parental love is motivated by the child's intimate affinity and likeness to her.
  • Here, too, were to be seen the likeness of the -- iron-hearted, it should have been -- Duke, presenting a birth-day present, or something of the sort, to a moonfaced yonker that sat fair and plump upon the knee of its royal mother. Ridgeway An Historical Romance of the Fenian Invasion of Canada
  • In her mind she compared them with the woman who poured the tea, and there uprose in contrast the gourds and pannikins of the Toyaat village and the clumsy mugs of Twenty Mile, to which she likened herself. THE STORY OF JEES UCK
  • It opens very shapr and bold, with a certain peppery darkness to it and a coolness that can only be likened to heavy wet sand that is slightly bound by flossy rootlets of seashore plants. Archive 2009-01-01
  • “You are attached to that picture for the sake of the likeness, no doubt, mesdames, for the drawing is dreadful?” he said, looking at Adelaide. The Purse
  • Critics have likened the new theater to a supermarket.
  • He likened this to the chances that an out-of-focus microscope could be focused by small vs. large random adjustments.
  • But the company says it is not to blame for unethical practice, likening such accusations to car manufacturers being blamed for reckless drivers. Times, Sunday Times
  • Godly edifying is the end ministers should aim at in all their discourses, that Christians may be improving in godliness and growing up to a greater likeness to the blessed God. Commentary on the Whole Bible Volume VI (Acts to Revelation)
  • She has been variously likened to David Bowie, a painting by Vermeer and a face from a silent movie.
  • It's all very well to liken a restaurant to the army, but mess cooks seldom win medals for bravery.
  • The images reproduce contemporary photographs, while the likenesses of historical figures like Nitti, Capone and Ness are copied exactly.
  • The only dog to which it can be likened is one that's dead. Times, Sunday Times
  • The agency had recommended that Kairos should get $7 million, and the fact the document was "doctored" - a "NOT" was inserted to change its meaning - drew a strong rebuke from Speaker Peter Milliken. CBC | Top Stories News
  • Of course, I answered him that I would make the "feint," regardless of public clamor at a distance, and I did make it most effectually; using all the old boats I could get about Milliken's Bend and the mouth of the Yazoo, but taking only ten small regiments, selected out of Blair's division, to make a show of force. Memoirs of the Union's Three Great Civil War Generals
  • During the Victorian period, successive imperialist wars of plunder were eulogised by the military and political elite as a worthy social challenge and likened to a game played between great powers.
  • For although I cannot sing odes to a patriarchally imagined deity, as it says in the Torah Deuteronomy 4:16: ‘Do not act corruptly by making an idol for yourselves, in the form of any figure †the likeness of male or female’, the tradition of my parents is carved in my heart in immutable letters.” The Atheist Siddur | Jewschool
  • Such a rethinking would not necessarily reject outright the possibility that such images represent their subjects through physiognomic likeness.
  • God created us in his own likeness and his own image, hence, it is quite obvious that He knows our strengths and our weaknesses.
  • Despite that inshore foraging habit, murrelets have been likened to alcids that forage off - shore due to distance they travel between nest sites and feeding areas.
  • For some reason the Spaniards saw a likeness between the banana tree and the totally different plane tree, which is how the plantain got its confusing name.
  • a near likeness
  • There is no 'godlikeness' without such bestowal, such 'imagining' into life. Clark Lectures, Trinity College, Cambridge Grace, Necessity and Imagination: Catholic Philosophy and the Twentieth Century Artist Lecture 4: God and the Artist
  • The game, All-Pro Football 2K8, features Simpson's likeness and a team called the Assassins playing as one of 240 former football greats. Archive 2007-08-01
  • A new media tic - likening George W. Bush to Franklin D. Roosevelt - is already so widespread that it's apt to become a conditioned reflex of American journalism.
  • Nonetheless, while likening Hungary to Greece may unnerve international investors, the comparison has domestic political merits.
  • Homology of love, homology of personality, likeness of experience, likeness of emotion experience.
  • They worship a great force, an entity, which could probably be well likened to Mother Nature.
  • And while it is true that Frank Auerbach's portraits are not likenesses in any conventional sense, that is probably the least significant fact about them.
  • Mr. Le Page Renouf (32) likens it to the "eidolon" of the Greeks, the "genius" of the Romans; and Dr. Wiedemann has lately written an interesting paper to show that it was not the person, but what he calls "the personality" or "individuality" of the deceased – meaning thereby that which distinguished him in life from other men; in other words, the mental impression which was evoked when his name was mentioned. Pharaohs, Fellahs and Explorers
  • You wish us to imbue your boys and girls with ideal standards of life, but all too often we see them, having left our schools and colleges, full of the knightly chivalry of youth, torn in the world of business between the ideal of Christlikeness and the selfish rivalry of commercial conflict. Christianity and Progress
  • Elsewhere, dune sounds have been likened to drums, foghorns and trumpets, among other things.
  • Each Loser is introduced with a comic rendering of their likeness, a handful of mildly implausible stunts keep things visually interesting, and then there's the egg-shaped superbomb that Max refers to as "The Snuke". Something Awful

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