A bridge...
A bridge...
Mr. Wemmick used the analogy of lending money to a friend to describe the concept of maintaining a "portable property" that can be easily withdrawn or removed. This concept was related to how people should manage and protect their financial resources.
you're throwing your money away
No, he disagreed...
If you make an analogy between two things, you show they are alike in some way.me and my friend are a analogy
The analogy for lifetime is to timeless as girlfriend is to intimate.
pal, buddy, mate
Wemmick is a clerk in Mr. Jaggers's law firm in "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens. He is also Pip's friend and confidant, providing a sharp contrast between his work life and personal life at his castle-like home called Walworth.
John Wemmick's bride is his longtime lady friend Miss Skiffins who came over to Wemmick's cottage. "the castle", every Sunday afternoon for tea with John and his father, known fondly as "the Aged". Miss Skiffens had a brother, an accountant, who helped John and Pip arrange a secret payment to Clarriker's trading house, buying a partnership, (unknown to him), for Herbert Pocket.
definition: a conversation or writing sentence: my friend and I had a long discussion about which console is best.
You can do that by getting in the middle of the discussion. And explaining to others how well you understand your friend.
subject = friend predicate = verb = learned