Vulgar words in At Good Old Siwash (Page 1)
This book at a glance
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 518 ~ ~ ~
You tal me Aye skoll du a teng, den you cuss me for duing et.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 519 ~ ~ ~
You tal me not to du a teng and you cuss me some more den.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 542 ~ ~ ~
I won't cuss you any more, Ole.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 546 ~ ~ ~
"I'll"--puff-puff--"never cuss you again.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,171 ~ ~ ~
At any rate, we took Martha to everything that came along, one of us or another, and before a month we didn't have to pretend very much to scrap for her dances, even if you did have to lug her around the room by main strength--she was as heavy on her feet as a motor-bus.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,686 ~ ~ ~
You know how you can damn a man in nine ways and then pull all the stingers out with a "but" at the end of it.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,686 ~ ~ ~
You've no idea what a job I had getting colors to pin on these chumps.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,100 ~ ~ ~
He runs a little automobile, and I hope I may get laid out in the subway if I haven't heard him cuss in real United States when the clutch slipped.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,195 ~ ~ ~
There were two big boners, Pacey and Driggs, in college who wore whiskers.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,624 ~ ~ ~
She was game and didn't make a murmur, but Frankling made a pale-gray ass of himself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,782 ~ ~ ~
Frankling, son of the locomotive works, authority on speckled vests and cotillons, was scrapping with Ole Skjarsen, the cuffless wonder from the lumber camps, for the affections of the prettiest girl in college.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,052 ~ ~ ~
The real reason is because when we fellows of that period mention her name we usually cuss a little in a hopeless and irritable sort of way.