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1 II | and still hope on? By what means did this young and pretty~
2 II | the father had been the means of~almost saving both the
3 II | the latter gave him the means to send both his sons to
4 III| the latter.~ ~"Good; that means we have a quarter of an
5 IV | Betting whatever you like means, in France, betting nothing
6 IV | replied Georges, by no means taken~aback. "There's nothing
7 VI | fortune. Confident of his MEANS, she was a thousand~leagues
8 VI | No, monseigneur; he means to go to Moulineaux before
9 VI | Pere Leger,--who is by no~means such a ninny as you thought
10 VII| economy to which his small means forced him, Clapart would
11 VII| knows how people without means are treated."~ ~"Well,"
12 VII| obtaining of school prizes means the certainty~of a fine
13 VII| could you do? You have no means, and you~must earn some,
14 VII| the army; it is your only~means, that I can see, to earn
15 VII| called a "titre nu"; that means a practice without~clients.
16 VII| future. If the boy ever means to become a man~it can only
17 IX | uncle, nearly doubling his means,~had still further enlarged
18 IX | who have been pinched for means in their youth will~remember.
19 X | first fault.~ ~"Men without means ought to be perfect," added
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