Vulgar words in Some Everyday Folk and Dawn (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 371 ~ ~ ~
If that had been a woman harmed by her husband going away with some barmaid, or other of them hussies men are so fond of, there wouldn't have been nothing done to avenge _her_.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 415 ~ ~ ~
The hussy!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 417 ~ ~ ~
Them hussies without homes ain't got no call to give themselves airs,--bits of things workin' for their livin'."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 556 ~ ~ ~
W'en I was young they was looked upon as the lowest hussies.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 763 ~ ~ ~
You just ask her what she thinks of it some time, and it will give you an idea; but I hate Noonoon, and would run away, only grandma goes on so terribly about hussies that go to the bad, and she's very old, and you know how you feel that a curse might follow you when people go on that way," said the girl in bidding me good night.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 874 ~ ~ ~
Only the lawyer feller was out on the box with me, an' makin' love heavier than it was rainin'.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 893 ~ ~ ~
He was always such a terrible quiet feller that no one seemed to notice, an' he'd never made love to me before, but he got besides hisself then and shouts, 'If ever you touch my girl again I'll hammer you to smithereens.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,650 ~ ~ ~
an' was got hold of by some fierce designing hussy--they always are--and it was all her fault.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,678 ~ ~ ~
"He has not been making love to you, has he, Dawn?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,016 ~ ~ ~
They stood in rows and grinned--the hussies!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,020 ~ ~ ~
I give you my word for it, there was hussies there on that stage, before respectable people's eyes, trying all they knew to make men be bad.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,535 ~ ~ ~
It's like your impudence--you a hussy out to work for your living at a few shillings a-week, and calling yourself a _lady_ help when you're a servant, that's what you are; to bully _me_, a woman with a good home, and the mother of a family."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,565 ~ ~ ~
"You hussy!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,576 ~ ~ ~
no fear; I never associate with scandal-mongers," contemptuously retorted Carry, as Mrs Bray made a precipitate departure, emitting something about a hussy who didn't know her place as she went.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,922 ~ ~ ~
"Dawn, you shameless hussy, you ought to be ashamed of yourself," said her uncle.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,473 ~ ~ ~
"If I liked him I'd go an' stand in the street an' listen to him, not take up the room of them as has a hall hired for 'em by the _best_ man, who has lived among us, and not some city lah-de-dah married to a hussy off the stage, an' who had women who might be any character goin' round speakin' for him," she tiraded, and turning to me aggressively demanded-- "Where are _your_ colours?"