If a child looks very much like her mother, you might say, “She ________ her mother.”
This question was slightly altered from the 1965–70 question.
| TAKES AFTER | 15 |
| RESEMBLES | 12 |
| IS THE SPITTING IMAGE OF | 9 |
| LOOKS LIKE | 7 |
| FAVORS | 4 |
| A SPITTING IMAGE | 1 |
| CARBON COPY | 1 |
| IS | 1 |
| IS A SPITTEN IMAGE OF | 1 |
| IS A SPITTIN IMAGE | 1 |
| IS A SPITTING IMAGE OF | 1 |
| IS A TWIN | 1 |
| IS THE SPIT IMAGE OF | 1 |
| MINI ME | 1 |
| MIRROR IMAGE | 1 |
| ‘S A SPITTING IMAGE OF | 1 |
| ‘S A TWIN OF | 1 |
| “SHE HAS HER MAMA’S EYES, NOSE, CHIN, HAIR COLOUR; SHE ALSO FAVOURS HER MAMA” | 1 |
| THE IMAGE OF | 1 |
| THE PICTURE OF | 1 |
| THE SPITTIN’ IMAGE | 1 |
| THE SPITTING IMAGE | 1 |
| THE SPITTING IMAGE OF | 1 |
![]()
DARE Data Summary by Dictionary of American Regional English (DARE) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.