Vulgar words in The Vicar of Bullhampton (Page 1)
This book at a glance
|
~ ~ ~ Sentence 541 ~ ~ ~
Upon the whole, he was much averse to knocking up the groom, the only man who lived on the parsonage except himself, and dragging Sam into the village.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,171 ~ ~ ~
She had, he thought, been now wooed long enough, and, as he told his wife more than once, was making an ass of herself.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,615 ~ ~ ~
You hear what that old ass, Sir Thomas, says."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,402 ~ ~ ~
"He's more of an ass, and twice as headstrong as I thought him," said Parson John to Miss Marrable the next day; "but still I don't think it will come to anything.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,114 ~ ~ ~
"My dear girl," said Fenwick, "what can you expect from an ass but his ears?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,944 ~ ~ ~
"It is intolerable to me," he said, "that I should be impeded in my free action by the interference and accusations of such an ass as that."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,573 ~ ~ ~
What an ass he must have been not to know his own possessions!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 10,747 ~ ~ ~
A man should never be ass enough to ask any woman a second time.