Vulgar words in The Profiteers (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 603 ~ ~ ~
"Damn it, I know you're going to look at my boots!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 991 ~ ~ ~
"Was he trying to make love to you this afternoon?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,390 ~ ~ ~
"I know what you would like to buy, though--and, damn it all, there's old Dreadnought Phipps down there--he's a bidder, too--ain't you, Phipps, old boy?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,427 ~ ~ ~
Damn!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,432 ~ ~ ~
"Sit down and don't be an ass, Dredlinton," he laughed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,453 ~ ~ ~
"Sit down, you blithering jackass!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,971 ~ ~ ~
"Your title and your social position aren't worth a damn to me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,018 ~ ~ ~
Unless you behave like a damn fool, you can reestablish some measure of control over her.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,075 ~ ~ ~
"The world has never gone so queerly that people haven't remembered to go on loving and be made love to.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,225 ~ ~ ~
"Damn the fellow!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,665 ~ ~ ~
"You don't care a damn about any one's sufferings," Wingate retorted, "so long as you can make money out of them."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,712 ~ ~ ~
"Josephine," he cried, "I don't care a damn about your leaving my house, then or at any time, but the more I think of it, the stranger it seems to me that this friend of yours, Wingate, should come to the office and threaten me for my connection with the B.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,722 ~ ~ ~
I begin to get the cold shoulder wherever I turn, but, damn it all, don't you understand that we must have money?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,934 ~ ~ ~
"You've been tampering with my servants, damn you!" he exclaimed.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,092 ~ ~ ~
Damn you!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,194 ~ ~ ~
They left their respective abodes for here in a secrecy which they themselves encouraged, for Rees imagined that your husband had urgent need of him, and Phipps was ass enough to believe that your summons meant what he wished it to mean.