Wrinkles
wrin·kle
W0239800 (rĭng′kəl)Wrinkles
See Also: COMPLEXION, FOREHEAD, SKIN
- All the flesh of him that showed, had creases like miniature gullies in the skin —Paul Horgan
- Deep lines that looked like dark parentheses around her lips —Alice McDermott
- Face as creased as his trousers —Sumner Locke Elliott
- Face as lined as an Indian squaw’s —John Fowles
- Face creased up like a fine soft handkerchief —Lawrence Durrell
- A face crisscrossed with lines like an old paper bag —Margaret Millar
- Face … delicately wrinkled like a fine thin notepaper —Louise Erdrich
- The face grows lined and wrinkled like a chart —Karl Shapiro
- Face like a withered walnut —Edith Wharton
- Face lined as soft leather —Sue Grafton
- Face, lined like a much-folded map —Mollie Hardwick
- Face lined like a river delta —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Face … marked by a little cross-hatching of fine lines, as though his cheek had lain on corduroy —Harvey Swados
- Face marked with gossamer lines like the craze of enamel —Samuel Yellen
- Face … savagely gouged, like the land after the passage of a fast-running rain that makes temporary rivers which plow the ground and leave sunbaked veins of rut afterward —Paul Horgan
- Face so wrinkled that it was like a parchment loaded with hieroglyphics —G. K. Chesterton
- Faces … wrinkled by wind and sun like cured meat —George Garrett
- Face wrinkled in deep furrows like the fissures in a red clay road after rain —Ellen Glasgow
- Face … wrinkled like the bark of the pine trees —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
- Face … wrinkling like a bent leather glove —Harvey Swados
- Grooves like gashes ran from his nostrils to his mouth-corners —Dashiell Hammett
- Had a thousand wrinkles on her face, so that she looked most like an aging Barbie doll —Shelby Hearon
- Her face is etched all over with fine lines, as though her skin has been caught under a butterfly net —Daphne Merkin
- Her face was wrinkled like a roll-top desk —Arthur Baer
- Her skin had a pattern all its own of numberless branching wrinkles and as though a whole little tree stood in the middle of her forehead —Eudora Welty
- His neck all in wrinkles resembling cracks, criss-crossing one another, as though his neck were made of cork —Ivan Bunin
- His skin wrinkled up like crumpled butcher paper —Jonathan Valin
- Jagged lines around his eyes, lines like scars from a broken bottle —Richard Lourie
- The lines deep graven in the soft skin about her eyes and mouth were like rivers in a black-and-white map —Frank Swinnerton
- Lines etched by age, like frost patterns on a windowpane —Dorothea Straus
- The lines on her forehead and neck were as if scored with a knife —John Braine
- Pink skin scored with wrinkles like the furrows of a corn field —Carlos Fuentes
- Shriveling like an overbaked potato —Ira Wood
- Skin … wrinkled like a wine-skin —W. Somerset Maugham
- Skin wrinkled like an old paper bag —Margaret Millar
- Skin wrinkles like paint —Derek Walcott
- Stretch marks … looked like streaky bacon held up to the light —David Niven
- (On my skin) the wrinkles branch out, overlapping like hair or feathers —Margaret Atwood
- Thin long lines like the lines in cracked glass or within a cake of ice —Saul Bellow
- A sheaf of fine wrinkles spread [from corners of eyes] like a fan —L. P. Hartley
- Wary lines around the corners of his eyes, like sparrow’s claws —Derek Lambert
- Wrinkled as an iguana —Richard Ford
- Wrinkled as a dry plum —Anon
A much-used variation: “Wrinkled as a prune.”
- [A newborn baby] wrinkled as a head of lettuce —Charles Johnson
- Wrinkled as a walnut —Dominique Lapierre
- A wrinkled, wizened face, like that of an aged monkey —William Styron
- Wrinkle like an apple left uneaten too long —Anon
Simile makers are greatly drawn to comparisons between apples and wrinkled skin. Some examples from current literature: “Wrinkled as a roasted apple” (Desmond O’Grady); “Wrinkled like a stale apple” (Graham Greene); “Wrinkled like a winter apple” (Isak Dinesen); “Wrinkled like the skin of a winter-kept apple” (Wallace Stegner); “Wrinkles crept into it [a woman’s face] like worms” (Erich Maria Remarque).
- The wrinkles in her skin shone like a bright net —Eudora Welty
- Wrinkles of delight appearing on the leathery skin like cracks in a shattered safety glass —Robert J. Serling
- Wrinkles [in forehead] … rush together like sentinels —Irving Stone
- Wrinkling like a potato —W. D. Snodgrass