I believe it is used to describe a certain kind of friendship. "Grows like mist" - meaning you don't notice it until it is impossible to not notice and "Holds like iron" suggesting once it is, it cannot easily be broken. I've only come across it once before, a long time ago, and it has since become one of my most treasured phrases.
id think nails (that holds wood and stuff together), rust, and other stuff like that
"of the mantle" is the prepositional phrase.
An iron bar is a conductor of electricity due to its ability to allow the flow of electrons. Iron has a high electrical conductivity compared to insulators like rubber or plastic.
A heavy iron ball is a dense, solid sphere made of iron. It is often used for weightlifting, as a counterbalance in machinery, or as a projectile in sports like shot put.
When iron is exposed to a magnetic field, its atoms align in the same direction, creating a magnetic field in the iron. This alignment makes the iron act like a magnet, attracting or repelling other magnetic materials.
It grows like a plant then you can pick it and sell it for 1 000 000 dollars on ebay
In males, the scrotum holds the testis. In puberty the testis grow in size and so the scrotum also grows bigger.
Grows on bushes like strawberries.
yes it's like a plant. it grows...
The phrase "sweating like a pig" actually has nothing to do with the animal that you might find on a farm. Instead, it refers to iron "sows" and "piglets" made when smelting pig iron. In traditional iron smelting, liquid iron is poured into a mold shaped like one long line with many smaller lines branching off of it at right angles. This looks similar to piglets feeding from their mother, so these pieces became known as pigs. After the pigs are poured into the sand, they cool, causing the surrounding air to reach its dew point and turn into moisture on the pigs, like they are sweating. When the pig is sweating, it's cool enough to be moved.
id think nails (that holds wood and stuff together), rust, and other stuff like that
it grows like it
Assuming you mean in a convertible, I used the Iron on patches on the inside of the top. (like the ones Mom used to fix the knees in my jeans) Holds up and works great.
Bananas grows on trees in warm places, like islands Alexandria
No, "like rotten socks" is a simile, not a prepositional phrase.
This phrase is saying that physical barriers alone are not enough to create a sense of captivity. It suggests that true imprisonment comes from extended confinement, loss of freedom, and psychological factors, rather than just the presence of physical barriers like iron bars.
it looks like a tadpole with a tail