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| Alphabetical [« »] wool 5 woolen 5 word 68 words 71 wore 22 work 40 worked 4 | Frequency [« »] 72 head 72 oh 71 began 71 words 70 accomplice 70 come 70 shall | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances words |
Chapter
1 I | which he enforced these words was so menacing that one 2 I | murderer on hearing these words, presuming that he would 3 I | certainly have heard the words.~“It was that brigand, Lacheneur, 4 I | untie your tongue.”~These words produced the effect of an 5 I | began to quarrel; and from words they came to blows. One 6 II | confusion; but the astronomer’s words bore fruit in his mind. “ 7 II | was he impatient. These words afforded him the opportunity 8 II | easily. Do you remember the words that he uttered as he fell?”~“ 9 II | I understand. The man’s words were only an allusion.”~“ 10 III | Brilliant results!” These words stung the young man as deeply 11 III | which he imparted to his words only feigned?~Father Absinthe 12 III | delay might be fatal. At his words, she summoned all her energy; 13 IV | I just felt one.”~These words produced on Lecoq much the 14 IV | well that in such cases words don’t suffice. If we declare 15 IV | marks in the snow.”~At these words the younger man stopped 16 V | have gladly recalled his words.~“And you?” inquired the 17 VI | comparison with spoken, living words, palpitating with emotion 18 VIII | have vent in a torrent of words, if Lecoq, who had consulted 19 IX | addressing a few low-spoken words to the smiling Goguet, M. 20 IX | you didn’t overhear some words of their conversation. What 21 IX | commiseration. “In other words,” he remarked, “you refuse 22 IX | had imperfectly heard her words, and had failed to seize 23 IX | clearest voice, he read these words, taken down as they fell 24 X | thought embodied in these last words decided him. “Despite her 25 X | supposed murderer heard these words, an expression of mingled 26 X | culprit to say more than a few words in an investigating magistrate’ 27 X | prisoner was prodigal of words. He did not seem to think 28 X | months old.”~With these last words, the prisoner made a low 29 X | fluently.”~On hearing these words, Lecoq modestly stepped 30 XI | beating; on hearing these last words, however, he regained all 31 XI | quite misinterpreted his words. With such remarks did he 32 XII | death blow; and yet his last words testified to my innocence.”~ 33 XII | beneath the magistrate’s last words, the latter could not control 34 XII | evidence as that!”~At these words, Goguet, the smiling clerk, 35 XII | by Monsieur” (with these words the prisoner pointed to 36 XIII | fellow-prisoners.”~With these words he took his leave. Scarcely 37 XIV | repeating three or four German words with great earnestness to 38 XIV | told his story in a few words.~“It is really true that 39 XVI | prevent any exchange of words between the two. Accordingly, 40 XVI | withering glance and heard his words of menace. Terror-stricken, 41 XVI | Shall I take down the last words the witness uttered?”~“Certainly,” 42 XVI | for that supposition, your words would have been meaningless?”~“ 43 XVI | been meaningless?”~“What words?”~The magistrate turned 44 XVI | ways than one.”~As these words fell on Polyte’s ears, it 45 XVI | her life to retract the words that had escaped her when 46 XVI | misunderstood, that her words had been misconstrued; and 47 XVI | outside.~With Lecoq’s last words still ringing in his ears, 48 XVII | scarcely heard Lecoq’s last words, so enraged was he at the 49 XVII | no time to waste in vain words and idle boasting. Lecoq 50 XVII | the weight of this man’s words as completely as if it were 51 XVIII| shoulders at these last words, and then in a tone of mingled 52 XVIII| custodians. His manner and his words were so natural that head 53 XVIII| find on the same page the words that will express his thoughts. 54 XIX | he reproduced most of the words of the original letter, 55 XIX | had received it?”~These words were uttered with such a 56 XIX | and that these various words formed several intelligible 57 XIX | comedy didn’t succeed.”~These words startled the magistrate 58 XIX | contempt!”~At these bitter words, Lecoq turned white with 59 XIX | Segmuller to utter these harsh words; they were both cruel and 60 XIX | many things these simple words explained. Did they not 61 XX | cousin was to say certain words—a countersign, as it were. 62 XX | began to say some peculiar words—the countersign, no doubt. 63 XX | incoherent threat, in which such words as “downright robbery” and “ 64 XXI | the signification of its words.~“What wonderful actors!” 65 XXI | him in a bundle.~At these words the man in the tattered 66 XXI | their conversation; and the words “a good stroke,” and “money 67 XXI | hastened toward them. In a few words, Lecoq explained the situation, 68 XXII | short.”~On hearing these words, Lecoq became so frightfully 69 XXII | extreme. The superintendent’s words of praise fell on his ears 70 XXIV | magistrate.”~On hearing these words, Tabaret rubbed his hands 71 XXIV | Sairmeuse.”~On hearing these words, Father Absinthe indulged