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| Alphabetical [« »] woolen 5 word 68 words 71 wore 22 work 40 worked 4 working 4 | Frequency [« »] 22 ve 22 vehicle 22 walked 22 wore 21 ago 21 arrested 21 became | Émile Gaboriau Monsieur Lecoq IntraText - Concordances wore |
Chapter
1 I | was of medium stature, and wore a full beard. His clothes, 2 III | Exactly. And this fellow wore the finest of boots. See 3 III | tall man of middle age; he wore a soft hat and a shaggy 4 IV | footmarks left by the woman who wore the broad shoes, but that 5 V | possible, the murdered man who wore a uniform, for if one might 6 V | been of middle age, and wore, if I am not mistaken, a 7 VII | noticed that the prisoner wore no socks, and that his feet 8 IX | d’Escorval, Lecoq’s face wore such an expression of consternation 9 IX | doorkeeper. His plump face wore an air of frankness and 10 IX | beardless face habitually wore a silly smile, not out of 11 XII | coarse, ill-fitting boots you wore were removed, and the officials 12 XII | remarks the prisoner’s face wore, by turns, an expression 13 XV | form entirely. His eyes wore an anxious look, and his 14 XV | way.~Papillon’s features wore an air of self-satisfied 15 XIX | to him.”~May’s features wore such an expression of marked 16 XX | Prefecture de Police. He wore a tattered black woolen 17 XX | long-bearded gentleman, who wore gold-rimmed spectacles over 18 XX | apparel. The garments he wore that day were black cloth, 19 XX | the loafer whose garb he wore, Lecoq took his stand beside 20 XXI | decidedly changed, for he wore a pair of dark blue linen 21 XXI | Lecoq had both adopted. He wore a dirty blue blouse and 22 XXIII| himself.”~The sick man’s face wore a comical expression of