Part, Chapter
1 I,I | you burn your sign, which cost six hundred francs, and~
2 I,II | enormous credit. His household cost~him nearly twenty thousand
3 I,III| of his own, keeping the cost, in the first instance,~
4 I,III| paper before lettering. It cost fifteen~hundred francs,
5 I,IV | spent~three years at the cost of the State. In Italy the
6 I,IV | much do you think it will cost?"~ ~"An architect can estimate
7 I,IV | spot."~ ~"How much it will cost, at a rough guess?" said
8 I,IV | right of entry),~at your own cost, in masonry. Don't fear,--
9 I,VI | and quite unsalable.~They cost originally eight sous; he
10 I,VII| people whose invitations cost them more than one application.
11 I,VII| library (repaid to Cesarine), cost not less, though~Cesar was
12 I,I | listen to him that Roguin had cost him~a hundred thousand francs.
13 I,I | thousand in bills for the cost of the ball, and a hundred
14 I,III| in~Birotteau's ear) will cost us twelve thousand francs."~ ~"
15 I,VI | interrupted Pillerault.~ ~"--cost nearly sixty thousand francs,
16 I,VI | Roses'! Why, the shop~alone cost ten thousand; the appartement
17 I,VI | thousand; the appartement cost forty thousand; the mere~
18 I,VI | the frames, the boilers,~cost thirty thousand. Why! at
19 I,VII| run; it will, moreover, cost me~three thousand francs
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