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| Alphabetical [« »] humiliating 1 humiliation 1 humor 3 hundred 30 hundredth 1 hung 3 hunger 5 | Frequency [« »] 30 easy 30 given 30 humanity 30 hundred 30 loved 30 odeon 30 question | Gustave Flaubert The George Sand-Gustave Flaubert letters IntraText - Concordances hundred |
Letter
1 Introd | goodness of her cause. “A hundred times in life,” she declares, “ 2 Introd | Enormously productive, with a hundred books to his half-a-dozen, 3 XVIII | the next day I am three hundred, if the dream has been sombre. 4 XXI | all the wounds of pride. A hundred times in life, the good 5 LXI | father stole about three hundred thousand francs from his 6 LXXXII | your mother, and we said a hundred times that we loved you. 7 XCVII | s Day not to have over a hundred pages more to write, that 8 CIII | wasn’t it? Ninety out of a hundred provincial middle-class 9 CXXI | theology! They have had three hundred years of existence, that 10 CXLII | that persecution here, at a hundred thousand leagues from Parisian 11 CLXXIII | bubbling spring fifty or a hundred yards below ground. The 12 CLXXIX | had at my door today two hundred and seventy-one poor people, 13 CLXXXVII| hardly knows whether one is a hundred years old or not!~My little 14 CXCVII | infamy is his nature?~No, a hundred times no. Humanity is outraged 15 CC | would perhaps not have a hundred performances, but a bad 16 CC | play would not have three hundred. But this nucleus has become 17 CCI | neighbor, who may be worth a hundred times more. In an industrial 18 CCI | For my part, I send you a hundred thousand affectionate greetings.~ 19 CCX | Saturday, I shall read a hundred and thirty pages of it, 20 CCXII | Tourgueneff to whom I read the hundred and fifteen pages of Saint-Antoine 21 CCXII | the end of a passage of a hundred lines, he remembers a weak 22 CCXXXIII| I have written about a hundred letters, for the most part 23 CCXXXIV | etc., and to talk about a hundred other things privately.~ 24 CCXXXIX | others. I wish you three hundred performances for Mademoiselle 25 CCLII | it make whether one has a hundred thousand enemies if one 26 CCLXX | come down to under fifteen hundred francs.~I think that my 27 CCLXXXII| Conquete de Plassans, seventeen hundred in six months, and there 28 CCLXXXIV| I am worrying like five hundred devils about my book, asking 29 CCCII | attain. Therefore you are a hundred times richer than all of 30 CCCII | than for three, or for a hundred thousand.~One must write