Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
custom 4
customary 2
customs 2
cut 40
cutlass 1
cutlasses 9
cutting 7
Frequency    [«  »]
41 pale
41 tent
41 walked
40 cut
40 days
40 door
40 gisco
Gustave Flaubert
Salammbo

IntraText - Concordances

cut

   Chapter
1 I | the elephants, desiring to cut down their trunks and eat 2 I | made of Indian cane. They cut the lock-straps with their 3 I | large dark purple mantle, cut of an unknown material, 4 II | their vacant battlements cut out against the edge of 5 II | rushed into the woods to cut staves.~Day dawned; the 6 IV | public squares, and was cut from top to bottom by countless 7 IV | stoned, or their heads were cut off by a sabre-stroke from 8 V | a square before heaps of cut grass. Then they passed 9 V | legs. Through some fissures cut in the wall there fell thin 10 VI | and their throats were cut on the edge of a ditch. 11 VI | with very heavy fringes, cut out of the handsomest purple. 12 VI | he was in good health, he cut into the forcemeats of cheese 13 VI | and let all their hands be cut off and brought to me in 14 VII | Her sandals, which were cut out in bird’s plumage, had 15 VII | thousand trees have been cut down at Maschala, and at 16 VII | from his bosom to have it cut into a cuirass more solid 17 VII | Hamilcar perceived them.~“Who cut off your arm?”~“The soldiers, 18 VII | the trunk of the third was cut off.~They looked sadly at 19 VIII| obliquely pointed lances, cut through the Barbarians; 20 IX | themselves, but which they had cut off corpses; for many had 21 IX | clad in a brown cuirass cut in little scales; he was 22 IX | exasperation, and resolved to cut his way through in one way 23 XI | hand. The ten fingers are cut off. The mouth eats no more.”~ 24 XI | live in crystal grottoes cut out at the foot of the hills. 25 XII | their foreheads; they were cut in pieces, crushed to the 26 XII | blackened their cheeks; they cut off their hair; they drew 27 XII | quite a “sacred spring,” cut one another’s throats like 28 XII | from their feet, which they cut off at the ankles, to their 29 XII | sent back with their hands cut off.~Immediately afterwards, 30 XII | plain. The aqueduct, being cut through in the centre, was 31 XIII| walls at the end of the town cut uneven zigzags upon the 32 XIII| Outside communications were cut off and an intolerable famine 33 XIII| exalted form. Their flesh was cut into equal portions and 34 XIV | bending over the corpses they cut strips from them with their 35 XIV | as they were dying, they cut the throats of the water-carriers, 36 XIV | like ploughshares; they cut, hewed, and hacked with 37 XIV | palm-trees in the gardens were cut down for lances; cisterns 38 XIV | upon the Barbarians, and cut them off. Their maniples 39 XIV | namely, whose trunk had been cut off.~Then it seemed to the 40 XV | behind on a kind of throne cut out of the carapace of a


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