Vulgar words in In the Bishop's Carriage (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 92 ~ ~ ~
Hush your laughing, Tom Dorgan; I mean calling him "daddy" seemed to kind of take the cuss off the situation.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 901 ~ ~ ~
Damn it, I'm Moriway, the man she was going to marry.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,272 ~ ~ ~
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,427 ~ ~ ~
It makes you feel awfully cocky, don't it?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,088 ~ ~ ~
Gray was furious when she heard of it--their making use of her Lord in such a way--but Lord Harold just swallowed his big Adam's apple with a gulp or two, and said: "'Pon honor, it's a blawsted scheme, you know; but I'm jolly sure I'd make a bleddy ass of myself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,515 ~ ~ ~
He caught me by the shoulders, knocking up my chin so that he could look down squarely at me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,194 ~ ~ ~
It's only the cranks that get cocky and think they can upset the fellows on top.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,451 ~ ~ ~
Just the weight of that little body riding like a bonny boat at anchor on your arm, just the cocky little way it sits up, chirping and confident; just the light touch of a bit of a hand on your collar; just that is enough to push down brick walls; to destroy pictures of bruised and maimed children that endure after the injuries are healed; to scatter records that even I--I, Nancy Olden--can't believe and believe, too, that other women have carried their babies, as I did some other woman's baby, across the Square.