Frank J. Wilstach, comp. A Dictionary of Similes. 1916.
Stiff
Stiff as a board.
—Anonymous
Stiff as a fakir in a box left too long buried.
—Anonymous
Stiff as a frozen shadow.
—Anonymous
Stiff as a plaster mask.
—Anonymous
Stiff as a poker.
—Anonymous
Stiff as a post.
—Anonymous
Stiff as hedge-stakes.
—Anonymous
Stiff as steel.
—Anonymous
Stiff like a state coachman.
—Charles Dickens
Sitting stiffly by, like a functionary presiding over an interview, previous to an execution.
—Charles Dickens
Stiff as a dead body.
—Jonathan Dickinson
Stiff as the corpse of a hanged man.
—Alexandre Dumas, père
Stiff like a side of coarse leather.
—James T. Fields
He stood … stiff as a marble statue.
—Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Stiff as a pointer’s tail.
—Maurice Hewlett
Stiff as a rubbing brush.
—Thomas Heywood
Stiffly, and like one slain and cold.
—Ebenezer Jones
Stiff as coat of mail.
—Walter Savage Landor
Stiff as a ramrod.
—Charles James Lever
Stiff as a turnpike.
—Charles Macklin
Stiff as iron bars.
—Guy de Maupassant
Stiff as oak-leaves after frost.
—George Meredith
Stiff as logwood.
—George Meredith
Stiff like a soldier on parade.
—Charles Reade
Stiff as a stone.
—John Ruskin
As stiff as a brick-built-wall.
—James Kenneth Stephen
Stiff as a viper frozen.
—Alfred Tennyson
Stiff as Lot’s wife.
—Alfred Tennyson
Stiff as a dry Quaker.
—Thomas Wade