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| Alphabetical [« »] know 127 knowing 8 knowledge 8 known 23 knows 20 l 6 la 18 | Frequency [« »] 23 excuse 23 friends 23 itself 23 known 23 leave 23 look 23 mother | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances known |
Chapter
1 I | but he was universally known as “the General.” This sobriquet 2 II | semi-lucidity. His comrades had known, but had forgotten, his 3 III | footprints which he had not known how to read, which had been 4 V | water, wine, and sugar, known round about the barrieres 5 VI | not the case? Nothing was known concerning the victims; 6 VII | s motive. This much was known already; that the prisoner 7 VIII | badly-lighted corridor known as the Galerie de l’Instruction, 8 XI | Segmuller would not have known what to believe, but in 9 XI | the first time—could have known of this door’s existence.”~ 10 XV | that they had become widely known, and that the unfortunate 11 XV | frequented, moreover, she was known by the nickname of “Toinon 12 XVII | could the accomplice have known of the existence of this 13 XVIII| M. Simpson was very well known in that country, where he 14 XIX | But how could he have known it?” resumed Lecoq. “He 15 XX | this order the prisoner known as ——, in order that he 16 XX | gloomy jail, familiarly known as “la Souriciere” or the “ 17 XX | despairing gesture. “Ah! if I had known!” he murmured; “but you 18 XXII | Certainly; how else could I have known it! He even mentioned the 19 XXII | which he was most generally known: a sobriquet derived from 20 XXIII| sarcasms. “You might have known that you couldn’t succeed 21 XXIV | comedy’? You should have known that it could only have 22 XXIV | Grenelle-Saint-Germain, and that he is known as the Duc de Sairmeuse.”~ 23 XXV | imprisonment, all Paris would have known of it—and so—”~“You are