People, Interaction
People, Interaction
See Also: CROWDS, FRIENDSHIP, MEN AND WOMEN, RELATIONSHIPS
- All her life she had looked for someone who would … settle her in the proper place like a cushion on a couch —Helen Hudson
- [Different types of people] all mixed up like vegetables in soup —Flannery O’Connor
- All the hurtful ugly things that happened between us got somehow wrapped around the sweetness like a hard rind around a delicate rare fruit. Like a flower garden completely surrounded with tangles of barbed wire —Harryette Mullen
- (Harris) always managed to make him feel … like the character in the commercial who uses the wrong kind of deodorant soap —Andrew Kaplan
- Avoid them like piranhas —Richard Ford
See Also: ELUSIVENESS
- Bitching patiently at each other like a couple married much too long —James Crumley
The people doing the bitching in Crumley’s novel, The Wrong Case, are two farmers in a bar.
- Dealing with Valentine was like dealing with a king —Saul Bellow
- Distance between them … like the Persian Gulf —Robert Anderson
- Faced each other like scruffy bookends —Jonathan Gash
- Groups gathered a moment like flies —Bin Ramke
- Guided him by one elbow [to a seat] like a tugboat turning a tanker —Peter Benchley
- Hoisted her up like a parcel —Henri-Pierre Roche
- It was as if he could read my mind like an old tale he had learned by heart —George Garrett
- I want to lean into her [a daughter into her mother] the way wheat leans into wind —Louise Erdrich
- Lay side by side, like some old bronze Crusader and his lady on a sarcophagus in the crypt of some ancient church —MacDonald Harris
- (Take her by the lily white hand and) lead her like a pigeon —Anon American dance ballad, “Weevily Heart.”
The ballad dates to the late eighteenth/early nineteenth century.
- Leaned on [another person] … like a wounded man —George Garrett
- Like the sun, his presence shone on her —Marge Piercy
- Live together like brothers and do business like strangers —Arab proverb
- Loneliness sifted between us, like falling snow —Judith Rascoe
See Also: ALONENESS
- Our heart-strings were, like warp and woof in some firm fabric, woven in and out —Edna St. Vincent Millay
- People, like sheep, tend to follow a leader —occasionally in the right direction —Alexander Chase
- We seemed strangers [a group of three people sitting in room] waiting in a station to take a train to another city —Henry Van Dyke
- People sat huddled together [on street benches] like dark grapes clustered on a stalk —W. Somerset Maugham
- Read him like a label on a beer can —William H. Hallhan
- [Two men who don’t like each other] recoiling from one another like reversed magnets —Wyatt Blassingame
- Responded to each other nervously, like a concord of music —Lawrence Durrell
- Sat … like a pair of carefully-folded kid-gloves, bound up in each other —Charles Dickens
- She could feel the distance between them like a patch of fog —Lynne Sharon Schwartz
- She reads my silence like a page —Robert Campbell
- Sitting like strangers thrown together by accident —Ross Macdonald
- Something in her face spilled over me like light through a swinging door —Sue Grafton
- Students, their faces like stone walls around him [a college professor] —Helen Hudson
- [Many different kinds of people] swarmed around him like startled fish —Derek Lambert
- Tangled together like badly cast fish lines —Katherine Anne Porter
- They [a man and woman with child between them] lay like two slices of wheat bread with a peanut-butter center —Will Weaver
- They needed each other’s assistance, like a company, who, crossing a mountain stream, are compelled to cling close together, lest the current should be too powerful for any who are not thus supported —Sir Walter Scott
- They were … like two people holding on to the opposite ends of a string, each anxious to let go, or at least soon, without offending the other, yet each reluctant to drop the curling, lapsing bond between them —Hortense Calisher
- Took me about like a roast [to make introductions] —Mark Helprin
This spotlights the importance of using a simile within an appropriate context. The character being taken about “like a roast” in Helprin’s story, Tamar, is the last arrival at a dinner party. If someone were being introduced in a business setting, being passed around “Like a special report or a memo” might better suit the situation.
- Touched him on the breast as though his finger were the fine point of a small sword —Charles Dickens
- Treated him like crows treat a scarecrow: they ignored him and avoided him —William H. Hallhan
See Also: REJECTION
- Wanted me to share her pain like an orgasm, like lovers in poems who slit their wrists together —Max Apple
- Watching each other like two cats; and then, as cats do, turn away again, indifferently, as if whatever was at stake between them had somehow faded out —L. P. Hartley
- (The Heindricks) were making me feel like a specimen in a jar —Jonathan Gash
See Also: DISCOMFORT
- We sat half-turned toward one another like the arms of a parenthesis —Cornell Woolrich
- You play my heart like a concertina —Harvey Fierstein
Similes Dictionary, 1st Edition. © 1988 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
References in periodicals archive
Describe camp (
people, interactions, and activities).
Copyright © 2003-2025 Farlex, Inc
Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.