Vulgar words in Nuttie's Father (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,791 ~ ~ ~
As the Irishman felt blue moulded for want of a bating, so do I feel fagged out for want of an honest day's work.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,919 ~ ~ ~
'Poor boy, he may settle down when he has ascertained what an ass he is,' said Mr. Dutton.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,008 ~ ~ ~
'I should call it the consequence of being dragged out with a sore heart,' returned Nuttie--a little speech she had prepared ever since she had seen how knocked up her mother was.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,060 ~ ~ ~
Outwardly deferential, he could thwart and annoy her in a hundred ways, from making love to the housemaids to making evil suggestions to his master, yet never giving her any overt cause of complaint.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,641 ~ ~ ~
Mr. Egremont was again angry, declared that she had misunderstood, and made the worst of it; that Dr. Brownlow was a conceited young ass; that his friend played into his hands; with other amenities of the same kind, to which she listened with mingled irritation and pity for his unreasonableness, and even at the sympathy which he found in Annaple's hopeful nature.