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Alphabetical    [«  »]
holy-water 1
home 46
homeric 1
honest 30
honesty 2
honey 1
honey-moon 1
Frequency    [«  »]
30 amount
30 cephalic
30 followed
30 honest
30 hour
30 however
30 interest
Honoré de Balzac
Rise and Fall of Cesar Birotteau

IntraText - Concordances

honest

   Part, Chapter
1 I,I | life! On the word of an honest~woman, isn't it pitiable? 2 I,I | ball! we? On the word of an honest woman, you are dreaming, 3 I,I | the flower of the~lot, if honest folk were not all worth 4 I,I | defect. On the word of an honest man it~lies on my heart. 5 I,II | perfumery, and live like honest~bourgeois without meddling 6 I,II | Why should he risk his honest and simple independence 7 I,II | horse, his sturdy limbs, his honest~and straightforward manner, 8 I,II | aspired. She wished to be an~honest woman, a good mother of 9 I,II | become~in after years an honest man. Gifted with passionate 10 I,II | thought, might have become an honest man; his~previous fault 11 I,II | public reprobation of an honest man might~drive one still 12 I,II | the open forehead of an honest man. His nose,~broken at 13 I,II | If the bankrupt is an honest man, and recovers himself, 14 I,III| the thing is, I've been honest,--~/tenaciously/! I've kept 15 I,VII| to the buttonhole~of an honest perfumer. If misfortunes 16 I,III| line I'll hold for him?"~ ~Honest minds are devoid of tact; 17 I,III| in so doing they are more honest~than France herself."~ ~" 18 I,III| knowing how to withhold an honest sentiment vulgarly expressed. 19 I,IV | tarnish the soul of the honest bourgeois as~though he came 20 I,IV | I believe him to~be an honest man; but if he asks you 21 I,V | a man who~passed for as honest as the day should play those 22 I,V | Constance. "Well, you are all honest people,~and I sha'n't lose 23 I,V | degrees of integrity~among honest men.~ ~"The King has just 24 I,VI | creditors, and~laying up for the honest man a store for the future; 25 I,VI | illegal, false and true, honest and dishonest.~A man is 26 I,VI | had~said, "A man may be honest till he fails, but he comes 27 I,VI | conduct was scrupulously honest, that his books were regular,~ 28 I,VI | watches,--things which an honest man might have taken~without 29 I,VI | thinking himself less than honest. Constance had left her~ 30 I,VII| this retinue roused the~honest man to an elation which


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