The 2,796 occurrences of cuss
View the definition of "cuss" on The Online Slang Dictionary
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~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,384 ~ ~ ~
"I'd heard you were a pessimistic cuss when battle started--" "Pessimistic, hell, I'm merely counting things up."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 637 ~ ~ ~
_Jack._ Let 'em come in, I don't care a continental cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,956 ~ ~ ~
An' Grégor, he cuss and swar an' he kiarry on, an 'low he want play game poka.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,993 ~ ~ ~
"Yes, he drink, Lord, only he cuss me slow, an' 'low he gwine break my skull."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,019 ~ ~ ~
"The old pot-metal Cuss himself has come for us!" cried Uncle Walter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,692 ~ ~ ~
"I know an awful cuss hangs over the feller," said Troffater.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,696 ~ ~ ~
"Yis, under a cuss, an' may it please your honor," said Troffater.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,699 ~ ~ ~
"Scriptur pernounced the cuss."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 198 ~ ~ ~
Cuss 'em, an' contrive 'em, both sides on 'em, all an' similar!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 489 ~ ~ ~
"I'm glad of a chance to thank you for helping her with that poor little cuss, José.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,818 ~ ~ ~
Then there's Pete Haines, a half-witted old cuss--begging your pardon, Ma'am!--that's got enough dust cached somewhere to keep himself drunk perpetual; and the Widow Atkinson, and Big Olaf, and--and Klondike Kate."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,581 ~ ~ ~
and our own expression "a rum _customer_," reduced in America to "a rum _cuss_."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,880 ~ ~ ~
INDEX abacot, 201 abet, 77, _n._ abeyance, 108 abominable, 3, _n._ abominate, 3 abracadabra, 15, _n._ 2 accomplice, 128, _n._ acquaint, 78 acton, 115 adder, 113 adjutant, 34, 147 admiral, 148 affidavit, 4 ague, 139 aitch-bone, 113 akimbo, 100 Alabaster, 170 alarm, 115 alarum, 115 albert chain, 39 alcade, 115 alderman, 92 Aldridge, 171 Alec, 70 alert, 115 _alfana_, 187 Alfred David, 125 alguazil, 115 alibi, 4 alley, 69 alligator, 115 Allman, 173 allure, 110 alone, 62 Alured, 195, _n._ 2 A.M., 4 ampersand, 57 analysis, 6 _ananas_, 32, _n._ 1 ancient, 128 andiron, 115 Andrea Ferrara, 50 anecdotage, 132 animal, 4 anlace, 59 Annabel, 58 _ansatus_, 100 antic, 141 antlers, 99 ant-lion, 32 _apache_, 12 _Apfelsine_, 31 appeach, 62 appendicitis, 11 apprentice, 118 apricot, 20 apron, 57, 113 Arabella, 58 arbour, 133 arch, 83 argosy, 50 _aringo_, 21 Arkwright, 176 arles, 119 armada, 2 _armée_, 2 Armitage, 5 Armstrong, 180 aroma, 6 arquebus, 127 arrant, 83 arras, 47 array, 95, _n._ _arrière-ban_, 72 artillery, 161, _n._ assassin, 22 assegai, 25 asset, 116 assize, 62 assoil, 10 astonish, 106 astound, 106 Atkin, 171 atlas, 6 atomy, 62 _atout_, 9 Atterbury, 172 Atwood, 172 _auberge_, 133, 164 Aubray, 174 _Augensprosse_, 99 auger, 113 avers, 143 avoirdupois, 143, _n._ 2 ayah, 26 Bacchus, 170 'baccy, 66 bacinet, 198 bachelor's buttons, 30 backgammon, 158 _badaud_, 108, _n._ 1 Bailey, 175 _bâiller_, 108, _n._ 1 bait, 77, _n._ baize, 119 Bakerloo, 66 bald, 38 bald-faced stag, 38 ballad, 152 ballet, 152 baluster, 60 ban, 72 banal, 73 bandore, 149 bandy, 109 banish, 72 Banister, 179 banister, 60 _banlieue_, 73 banjo, 149 bannal, 73, _n._ banns, 72 Barclay, 145 Bardell, 171 Barker, 178 baron, 191 barracking, 13 bartisan, 14 Barton, 172 Bart's, 66 basilisk, 38 basnet, 156, 198 bastinado, 26, _n._ 2 _battant neuf_, 107 batter, 154 battledore, 132 _Bauer_, 160 bay, 108, 119 Bayard, 119 Bayliss, 175 bead, 74 beadroll, 74 beadsman, 74 _béante_, 108, _n._ 1 beat the bush, 108 Beaufoy, 170 Beaulieu, 123 _beaupré_, 128, _n._ beaver, 155 _bec-jaune_, 96 bedlam, 61 Beecham, 169 beef-eater, 191 beejam, 96 beg, 193 begum, 157 belcher, 85 beldam, 85 _belette_, 91 belfry, 164 Bell, 170 Bella, 70 belladonna, 85 Bellows, 170 Bendigo, 190 _benêt_, 45 bergamot, 157 _bergeronnette_, 34 bergomask, 157 Bert, 70 bess, 42 bet, 77, _n._ _bête à bon Dieu_, 35 Betts, 172 betty, 42 bever, 124 beverage, 60 Bewsher, 85, _n._ bey, 157 bezant, 49 bible, 86 biggin, 193 bike, 66 bilbo, 50 billiments, 66 Billingsgate, 48 billy-cock, 40 binnacle, 63 bird-lime, 200 Bishop, 175 biz, 67 black art, 130 blackguard, 84 Blood, 181 Blount, 181 bluff, 94, _n._ Blundell, 181 blunderbuss, 127 Blunt, 181 Bob, 172 bobby, 45 bodice, 118 Bodkin, 171 boer, 84, _n._ 1 _boîte_, 127 Boleyn, 173 bombasine, 96 bombast, 96 _bona-fide_, 4 Bone, 181 bonfire, 151 _bonhomme_, 80 _bonne femme_, 80 Bonner, 181 bonus, 4 boojum, 16 book, 86 Booker, 178 boom, 17 Boon, 170, 181 boor, 84 boot and saddle, 129 _bordereau_, 93 borel, 73 boss, 20 _boudoir_, 75 _boulevard_, 121 _boussole_, 127 _boutique_, 114 _bouvreuil_, 33 Bovril, 16 bowdlerise, 41 bower, 160 Bowery, 160, _n._ 2 bowie, 39 Bowser, 85, _n._ Bowyer, 176 boycott, 41 Boyer, 176 Brabazon, 173 brand new, 107 brandy, 68 branks, 8 _brasse_, 87 Brazil, 51 breeches, 117 breeks, 117 Brett, 173 Brewer, 182 briar, 165 bridal, 121 Bridges, 173 brig, 67 brigantine, 67 brisk, 63, _n._ 2 Bristow, 173 Britton, 173, _n._ 2 Brock, 180 Broderer, 178 broker, 150 bronze, 48 brooch, 151, 202 brose, 118 brougham, 39 Bruin, 36 Brunel, 181 buccaneer, 61, _n._ _Büchse_, 127 _Buchstabe_, 86 buck, 150 Buckhurst Holt, 135 budget, 88 bugle, 69 Bull, 181 Bullen, 173 bulwark, 121 buncombe, 48 bungalow, 94, _n._ bunkum, 48 burden, 157 bureau, 73 burgonet, 199 Burgoyne, 173 Burke, 41 _Bursche_, 94 bus, 69 bushes, 127 butcher, 150 buttery, 165 buxom, 82 Bythesea, 172 cab, 66 cabal, 192 cabbage, 153 _caboche_, 153 cad, 66 caddie, 66 cadge, 193 Cæsar, 175 Caffyn, 181 cage, 109 _cahier_, 146 caitiff, 139 cajole, 109 calculation, 87 calendar, 159 calender, 159 _calfater_, 201 Caliban, 132 callant, 68 calumet, 24 Calvert, 179 cambric, 47 Cambridge, 193 camomile, 32 canary, 51 cancel, 88 cancer, 35 _canif_, 55 canker, 35 cannibal, 132 canter, 68 canvass, 72 cape, 26 Capel Court, 152 _capestro_, 67 _capot_, 102 captain, 139 captive, 139 carat, 21 Carew, 123 Carfax, 122, _n._ 2 cargo, 142 cark, 142 carmine, 147 carnell, 202 carol, 152 carousal, 166 carouse, 166 cartridge, 61 case, 157 cash, 157 cashier, 18, 157 cashmere, 47 casket, 140 cass, 157 cast, 157 caste, 26 catch, 143 catchpole, 165 cate, 62 cater, 63 caterpillar, 33 catkin, 33 Catonet, 41 Cator, 62 cattle, 143 caucus, 13 caudle, 7 cauliflower, 153 caulk, 200 causeway, 125 caveat, 4 _cavestrolo_, 67 cavie, 109 celandine, 30 _cercueil_, 140 _cerf-volant_, 38 cervelas, 136 chabouk, 26 _chaise_, 116, _n._ 2 Challen, 173 Challis, 173 Chaloner, 177 chamberlain, 90 _chambrée_, 94 chameleon, 32 Champain, 173 Champneys, 174 chancel, 88 chancellor, 88 chancery, 165 Chaney, 174 _Chantecler_, 36 chap, 67 _chapeau_, 26 chapel, 26, 152 chaperon, 27 chaplet, 26 Chapman, 175 chapman, 67 chare, 2 charge, 142 charwoman, 2 chase, 143, 157 Chater, 143 _chaton_, 33 chattel, 143 Chaucer, 175 _chauvin_, 13 chawbuck, 26 Chawner, 177 Chaworth, 173 cheat, 84 check, 87, 120 cheer, 135 chelidonium, 30 _chenapan_, 55 Chenevix, 174, _n._ 2 _chenille_, 33 _cheptel_, 143 cheque, 89 chequer, 87 _chercher_, 57 cherry, 116 Chesney, 174 chess, 120 Chesterfield, 40 cheval-de-frise, 47, _n._ 1 _chevalet_, 39 _chevaucher_, 66 chewet, 37 chieftain, 139 chime, 8 Chinee, 116 Chippendale, 40 Chipping, 67, _n._ chit, 96 chore, 2 chortle, 16 _chou_, 153 _choucroute_, 129 chouse, 189 chuet, 37 chum, 94 churl, 84 cinch, 24 cinematograph, 11 cipher, 147 cit, 66 citizen, 122 Clark, 145 _Claude_, 45 claymore, 132 Cleaver, 178 clerk, 145 clothes-horse, 39 clove, 91 club, 78 cobalt, 44 Cobbett, 171 cobra, 26 cockney, 186 cocoa, 23 cocoa-nut, 23 coffer, 140 Coffin, 181 coffin, 140 cognovit, 4 colander, 154 _Colas_, 45 cole, 153 Collet, 170 colon, 6 colonel, 58 Coltman, 177 colza, 153 _comadreja_, 92 comma, 6 _commère_, 94 companion, 93, 165 compassion, 2 _compère_, 94 complex, 4 compound, 157 comptroller, 88 comrade, 94 connect, 105 constable, 89 _contrôle_, 88 controller, 88 Conyers, 173 coon, 64 cooper, 81, _n._ coopering, 67 _cordonnier_, 128 cordwainer, 128 _corne_, 117 Corner, 177 Cornwall, 151 Cornwallis, 174 corp, 116 corsair, 22 costermonger, 63, _n._ 1 _couleuvre_, 7 counterpane, 137 counterpoint, 137 court-card, 129 Coward, 181 coward, 36 cowslip, 30 cozen, 110 crack, 67 _cracovienne_, 50 crane, 38 crane's bill, 29 cratch, 8 cravat, 48 crayfish, 125 credence table, 123 crestfallen, 108 _crétin_, 45 crew, 64 Cri, 66 crimson, 147 crinoline, 137 Crocker, 178 Croker, 178 crowd, 176 crowfoot, 29 Crowther, 176 crosier, 164 cubit, 87 Cuddy, 36 cuddy, 165 cuirass, 161 Cullen, 173 cullis, 154 culverin, 7, 38 culvert, 203 cummer, 92, 95 _curée_, 161 curmudgeon, 201 currant, 49 curry, 95 curry favour, 131 curtal axe, 126 Curtis, 181 cushion, 169, _n._ cuss, 68 Custance, 171 _custodia_, 103 cutlass, 60, 126 cutler, 126 cutlet, 126 _dada_, 91 dado, 142 daffadowndilly, 71 daffodil, 71 Daft, 183 Dago, 45 dahlia, 31 dainty, 139 dairy, 165 dais, 139 daisy, 29 Dalmain, 174 Dalziel, 195 dam, 120, 142 damask, 47 dame, 142 _dame-jeanne_, 44 Dampier, 173 damson, 49 Dance, 181 dandelion, 30 dandy, 45 Dangerfield, 175 Danvers, 174 dapper, 80 dapple-gray, 71 darbies, 40 Darblay, 174 Darby, 145 Daubeney, 174 dauphin, 34 _Daus_, 109 _davier_, 42 davit, 42 Dawnay, 174 Day, 165 day-woman, 165 _dé_, 61, 131 dead men's fingers, 30 Debbyhouse, 175, _n._ 1 debenture, 5 decoy, 109 Dedman, 181 _déjeuner_, 148 delf, 48 deliberate, 1 delight, 122, _n._ 1 demijohn, 44 demure, 101 denizen, 122 Dennis, 170 Denry, 70 Depew, 8 _dérive_, 55 derrick, 40 derring-do, 15 derringer, 39 desk, 139 deuce, 109 _Deus_, 188 Devereux, 174 Dexter, 176 dexterity, 3 _di_, 8 _diablotin_, 171 _diane_, 10 diaper, 52 dice, 142 Dick, 172 dickens, 44 dicky bird, 37 die, 142 _Dietrich_, 42 Digg, 172 digit, 87 dimity, 149 _dinde_, 52 _dindon_, 52 _dîner_, 148 diocese, 150 dirge, 5 dirk, 20 _dirk_, 42 _Dirne_, 82 disaster, 106 disc, 139 dish, 139 dishevelled, 135 disk, 139 dismal, 8 Disney, 174 ditto, 153 ditty, 153 Dob, 172 Dobbin, 91 docket, 93 dodo, 33 dogma, 6 doily, 40 Dolman, 174 doll, 43 dollar, 49 dominie, 5 domino, 102, 191 _Dompfaffe_, 34 donah, 142 _doninha_, 92 donkey engine, 38 _donna_, 142 _donnola_, 92 do re me fa sol la si, 7 dornick, 47 dote, 80 dotterel, 33 dowlas, 48 _Drachen_, 38 dragon, 38 dragoon, 38 Drakensberg, 31 dram, 87 drat, 65 draught, 120 drawing-room, 65 drill, 148 drilling, 148 Drinkwater, 180 dropsy, 61 drub, 26, _n._ 2 Druce, 173 drugget, 52 Dubberley, 174 ducat, 49 duenna, 142 duffel, 48 Duke, 175 _dummer Peter, Michel_, 45 dunce, 45 Dupuy, 8 Durbeyfield, 175 Durward, 179 duty, 11 Duverney, 174, _n._.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,257 ~ ~ ~
Cuss the railways!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,393 ~ ~ ~
That little cuss?
~ ~ ~ Sentence 6,859 ~ ~ ~
"His name was Tuscaloosa Sam And often he would say, 'There's not a cuss in Arkansaw I can't whip any day.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 440 ~ ~ ~
If he only would cuss."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,964 ~ ~ ~
"Mo' better you call me St. Pierre because I'm a fisherman what cuss when I git mad.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,987 ~ ~ ~
"Odd," said Mr. Pepper, as they had grown to call him, "I heard that sung by a fellow up in Chartres Street two nights hand-running before this thing happened,--a merry cuss, too, with a rather loose hand on his shekels.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 804 ~ ~ ~
"Cuss her!" he said angrily; "a pretty bog she's led me into, she and that minx, Ada Parkinson!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,181 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, yes, he's a charitable old cuss," was Mr. Berry's elegant answer.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 124 ~ ~ ~
"No manures, fuss, cuss, or muss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 589 ~ ~ ~
"Stow that, you ugly cuss," said Seth good-humouredly, for he was used somewhat to Master Jasper's "cheek" by this time.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,041 ~ ~ ~
Hullo, you ugly cuss!" he added, hailing the darkey, who was running after the party and had now got close up, "what the dickens do yer want here?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,087 ~ ~ ~
"You jest stow that, and hold your rampagious cacklin', or I'll soon make you rattle your ivories to another toon, I reckon, you ugly cuss!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,354 ~ ~ ~
That consarned slippery cuss is gone.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,068 ~ ~ ~
He was with a swell-lookin' cuss with a beard an' shiny black togs----" "That was Mr. Glendale," interrupted Tom, rising eagerly to his feet.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 182 ~ ~ ~
Colonel Mayo was so indignant at the implied accusation that he used some cuss words, and asked him whether he thought we were a set of barbarians.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,719 ~ ~ ~
The names derived from cousin have been reinforced by those from Cuss, i.e.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 465 ~ ~ ~
"Look here," said he, "you seem to be a sort of Christian; cuss me if you don't!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 354 ~ ~ ~
An Adelphi audience is not to be satisfied with a one-scene piece, when that scene is without any incident in it worth a melodramatic father's cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,003 ~ ~ ~
'E cuss, 'e sweer; skin 'e no fit.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,422 ~ ~ ~
Bumbye, Màn, 'e is git so mad, 'e y-eye bin-a come red; 'e crack 'e toof, 'e do cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,234 ~ ~ ~
Cuss to his family the last five year-- Monstrous expensive with keep so dear-- 'Sides all the fuss and worrying.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 172 ~ ~ ~
Dr. Tjader was called in, and as soon as he found that the cuss was poisoned, he rushed down to the Magnolia Saloon and got the antidote, and poured it down him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,031 ~ ~ ~
Now Twine vas a gyrotwistive cuss, Ash blainly ish peen shown, Und vas alfays an out-findin Votefer might pe known; Und mit some of his circumswindles He fix de matter so Dat he'd pe himself at dis meetin And see how dings vas go.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 7,110 ~ ~ ~
"See how still he keeps, the old cuss," said Jack Henderson gently.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,696 ~ ~ ~
He says: I never like to see a man a-wrestling with the dumps, 'Cause in the game of life he doesn't always catch the trumps, But I can always cotton to a free-and-easy cuss As takes his dose and thanks the Lord it wasn't any wuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,790 ~ ~ ~
"Wal," went on One-Eye, philosophically, "I never was a lucky cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 84 ~ ~ ~
You know he's a yellow cuss."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 426 ~ ~ ~
If you've got a safe horse, one that's scared to death of you, he won't be a good horse--a yellow cuss that has to be dragged through every mud-puddle.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,974 ~ ~ ~
Nevah did hyeah a man anywhaih nigh Jo'dan's sho' cuss lak dat.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,183 ~ ~ ~
He's an onery, ugly cuss, never givin' me all the respeck that's due me, but somehow I like him, an' he never looked better nor more welcome than he does now, God bless the long-armed, long-legged, fightin', gen'rous, kind-hearted cuss!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,494 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, cuss it," said that young gentleman, "wot d' I care.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,817 ~ ~ ~
A deep young cuss," whispered Granny Purr, significantly.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,473 ~ ~ ~
He wos the landlord of this here pub, and a cuss to drink.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,418 ~ ~ ~
"Well, we are making an almighty good start, and I want to say here in the hearing of all interested friends that you're the smartest cuss I ever saw afloat."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,950 ~ ~ ~
I was afraid you were going astern, you young cuss, when I heard you'd gone skipper of a yacht, but I didn't think it was as bad as all this."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,942 ~ ~ ~
Cuss their picking and stealing and fighting and financing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,965 ~ ~ ~
"The law sharps are always hankering to catch a poor cuss who is trying to navigate these waters and suit the inspectors and the owners at the same time," admitted the master of the tug.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 8,708 ~ ~ ~
"He has done some wrecking, and is a reckless cuss."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 865 ~ ~ ~
"Now, Abe never had amounted to much when I knew him; he was just a low-down, ornery cuss every way that you looked at him.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,296 ~ ~ ~
I guess we'll have to go on usin' force, now that this cantankerous cuss have obliged us to begin.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,221 ~ ~ ~
Hit her with a great thick stick, he did--cuss him!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,920 ~ ~ ~
"Cuss 'em!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 444 ~ ~ ~
PATCH: She used ter cuss soft and gentle to herself--'appy all the day.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,302 ~ ~ ~
May life's patriotic cup for such Be filled with glory overmuch; And when their spirits go above in pride, Spirit of Patriotism, let these valiant abide Full in the sight of grand mass-meeting--I don't Want you to cuss them, But put them where they can hear politics, And yet can't discuss them!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 392 ~ ~ ~
* * * * * The girl, who was clearly a most cool-headed cuss, snatched for his gun where he'd dropped it, to make sure she got it ahead of me.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 746 ~ ~ ~
Stubborn single-minded cuss!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,315 ~ ~ ~
"Do as you like with the cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,725 ~ ~ ~
Then he pronounced a few cuss words, laughed at himself for getting so serious, shrugged, and with the casualness of hopper with his pockets loaded, moved toward the rec area, which was some distance off.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 603 ~ ~ ~
---- Honest, but Jim was the sourest man in all o' Comp'ny G; You could sing and tell stories the whole night long, but never a cuss gave he.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,474 ~ ~ ~
The application of this test, it is held, will keep the mule-skinners too fully occupied to be able to cuss or to care a cuss about cussing.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,555 ~ ~ ~
But you're too good a soldier, old dip, to cuss or cry; So--(there he heaved it into space)--goodby, old hat; goodby!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,393 ~ ~ ~
I remained quiet, and let him cuss, till at last he quieted down.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,220 ~ ~ ~
"Oh, yes, that little hair-lipped cuss," said he.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 3,633 ~ ~ ~
Cuss your nice old lady, and her good conversation, and all the ---- well-bred kids.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,008 ~ ~ ~
She is too small to work on a farm, and as you've got a big bony cuss there that would make a good plow hoss, I'll give you a big trade."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,727 ~ ~ ~
yah!' echoed three or four well-dressed darkies, who were standing near the doorway: 'Sarved 'im right; he'm a mean ole cuss, he am;' chimed in one of the latter gentry, as he added another guffaw, and, swaying his body back and forth, brought his hands down on his thighs with a concussion which sent a thick cloud of tobacco smoke, of his own manufacture, circling to the other side of the room.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,018 ~ ~ ~
The stingy cuss!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,648 ~ ~ ~
In earlier days a husband used to lock his wife in a pair of iron-bound corsets when he went away from home, keeping the key in his pocket, and thus not caring a tinker's cuss if his home were simply overflowing with handsome gentleman lodgers!
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,165 ~ ~ ~
Old mis', she cuss an' rare worse 'an a man.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,167 ~ ~ ~
Mars Sam, he stand by de pots handin' out de grub an' givin' out de bread an' he cuss loud an' say: 'Take a sop of dat grease on your hoecake an' move erlong fast 'fore I lashes you.'
~ ~ ~ Sentence 5,193 ~ ~ ~
I never heard nobody cuss so much over nothing as ever I found out.
~ ~ ~ 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 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 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.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 187 ~ ~ ~
To be crowned, to have an inquest held over a dead body by the direction of the coroner Crub, Croost _s._ a crust of bread Cruel _adv._ intensive, as cruel-kind, very kind Cry _s._ to challenge, bar, or object to Cubby-hole _s._ a snug comfortable situation for a child, such as between a person's knees when sitting before the fire Cuckold _s._ the plant Burdock; cuckold-buttons, the burs, (A S _coccel_, darnel, tares) Cue _s._ the shoe on an ox's hoof, or tip on a man's boot Curdle _v.a._ to curl, also, _v.n._; Curdles _s._ curls Cut _s._ a door hatch Curse _s._ cress Cuss _v._ to curse; Cussin Sarvice the Commination Custin _s._ a kind of small wild plum Cutty _adj._ small, as cutty-pipe, cutty-wren; Cutty-bye, a cradle, a hob-gobblin Daddick _s._ rotten-wood; Daddicky _adj._ perished like rotten-wood, applied metaphorically to the old and feeble Dag-end _s._ applied to a sheaf of reed Daggers _s._ sword-grass, a kind of sedge Dame _s._ never applied to the upper ranks of society, nor to the very lowest, but to such as farmer's wives, or the schoolmistress: rarely if ever applied to a young woman Dandy _adj._ distracted Dap _v._ to hop as a ball Dap _s._ the hop, or turn of a ball; also habits and peculiarities of a person, ex.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 417 ~ ~ ~
"So that's the cuss who's been robbing us."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 699 ~ ~ ~
"Why--why--down south--to the 3-bar-Y--to suthin' wuth livin' fer--to whar yuh'll be a sight better off than with a rough cuss like me."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 970 ~ ~ ~
"Murphy, you're a bad-tempered little stickler to rules that don't mean a cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,209 ~ ~ ~
I don't know what you got against the trestle, but I do know you're a hellish cuss I'm going to break to the halter.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,337 ~ ~ ~
He say--" "I don't care a tinker's cuss what he say.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,903 ~ ~ ~
Of course the Police don't give a cuss about the trestle, if they can get some one to hang."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 771 ~ ~ ~
Butsey White's a low-down, white-livered cuss, who'd take advantage of a freshman.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,738 ~ ~ ~
"The cuss that translates at sight?"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,747 ~ ~ ~
"Why, you're the cuss that smeared the Angel, swallowed the Canary, and bumped Tough McCarty, all at once."
~ ~ ~ Sentence 2,190 ~ ~ ~
"Dennis de Brian de Boru Finnegan," said Stover slowly, "I believe you are a whole-hearted little cuss.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 4,210 ~ ~ ~
"Three cheers for the little cuss!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,175 ~ ~ ~
And, though I don't like cuss-words, I have to acknowledge that I enjoyed the two or three that he promptly ejaculated.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,227 ~ ~ ~
Camp cried, "All the more fool--" but Baldwin interrupted him by saying,-- "That only shows what a mean cuss Cullen is.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,347 ~ ~ ~
"Git as angry as yer ---- please," roared the sheriff, wrathfully, "but ---- me if any ---- ---- cuss has a right to use such ---- ---- talk in the presence of a lady!"
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,351 ~ ~ ~
Evidently that cuss isn't here, but he's likely to come by and by.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 1,362 ~ ~ ~
"I told yer this was the last place to look for the cuss, Mr. Camp," he said.
~ ~ ~ Sentence 817 ~ ~ ~
"Jack, go and see what the old cuss wants," ordered the Captain.
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