dots-menu
×

Home  »  A Dictionary of Similes  »  Straight

Frank J. Wilstach, comp. A Dictionary of Similes. 1916.

Straight

Straight as a candle.
—Hans Christian Andersen

Straight as an angel’s flight.
—Anonymous

Straight as an Indian’s hair.
—Anonymous

Straight as a lance.
—Anonymous

Straight as a pine.
—Anonymous

Straight as a ramrod.
—Anonymous

Straight as a rush.
—Anonymous

Straight as a string.
—Anonymous

Straight as columns of fire.
—Anonymous

Straight, as if he had swallowed a stick.
—Anonymous

Straight as the backbone of a herring.
—Anonymous

Straight as a cane.
—Arabian Nights

Straight as a temple-shaft.
—Edwin Arnold

Straight as a shooting star.
—William Austin

Straight as a die.
—Alexander Barclay

Straight as a loon’s leg.
—J. R. Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms

Straight as a shingle.
—J. R. Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms

Straight as truth.
—Beaumont and Fletcher

Straight as poplars.
—Charlotte Brontë

Straight … like graves dug side by side at measured lengths.
—Elizabeth Barrett Browning

Straight to its aim as the aim of the rifle-ball of a Tyrolese.
—Edward Bulwer-Lytton

Straight as a rule.
—John Bunyan

Straight as a beadle’s wand.
—Charles Stuart Calverley

Straight as a bull’s back against the white sky.
—Bliss Carman

Straight as line.
—Geoffrey Chaucer

Straight as a lily on its stem.
—Wilkie Collins

Straight as a tower.
—Thomas Osborne Davis

Straight as any plummet line.
—Charles Dickens

Straight as a crow flies.
—Charles Dickens

As straight as a beggar can spit.
—Rudyard Kipling

Go as straight as a schoolboy at Christmas.
—Vincent Stuckey Lean (Collectanea)

Straight as a spear.
—Nathaniel Lee

Straight like a sala-tree.
—Mahabharata

Straight as Circe’s wand.
—Christopher Marlowe

Gleams straight like the glow which a ploughing keel doth break
From the grim sea around, with light on her bow and light in her raging wake.
—Westland Marston

Straight like vine poles.
—Guy de Maupassant

Fly straight as the emissary eagle back to Jove.
—George Meredith

Straight as the flight of the dove.
—George Meredith

Straight,—like a webfoot to water.
—George Meredith

Straight as a dart.
—Pilpay

Straight as the palm tree.
—Matthew Prior

Straight as a Seer’s thought into the blue of the immaculate heavens.
—Richard Realf

Straight as thought could span.
—Algernon Charles Swinburne

Straight as bolt from crossbow sped.
—Mark Twain

Straight as a wall.
—Ivan Vazov

Straight as a Sioux chief.
—Booker T. Washington