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Alphabetical    [«  »]
draw 5
drawer 7
drawing 5
drawing-room 36
drawing-rooms 4
drawings 2
drawn 11
Frequency    [«  »]
36 against
36 ah
36 beautiful
36 drawing-room
36 near
36 our
36 quite
Guy de Maupassant
Strong as death

IntraText - Concordances

drawing-room

   Part,  Chapter
1 I, II | stamp, the door of the large drawing-room opened wide once more, and 2 I, II | morning; then passing from drawing-room to drawing-room until evening, 3 I, II | passing from drawing-room to drawing-room until evening, refreshing 4 I, II | they passed into the large drawing-room, the boudoir at the end 5 I, II | Guilleroy, walking across the drawing-room, lighted now by only two 6 I, III| to pace to and fro in the drawing-room, going from one seat to 7 I, III| to the wall, in the large drawing-room darkened by the curtains. 8 I, III| threshold of the smaller drawing-room where the two ladies were 9 I, III| before I came here, in the drawing-room of the Duchesse de Mortemain.”~“ 10 I, III| noiselessly entered the drawing-room, bearing the tea-table, 11 I, III| the whole atmosphere of a drawing-room, to make it understood, 12 I, III| They reentered the smaller drawing-room together and seated themselves.~“ 13 I, IV | he entered the Countess’s drawing-room that evening, and found 14 I, IV | three were alone in the drawing-room with the Louis XV tapestries. 15 I, IV | through the shadowy end of the drawing-room, confounded them for an 16 II, II | him in the half-darkened drawing-room.~She went up to her room 17 II, II | antechamber, before the drawing-room door.~He opened his arms 18 II, II | and Olivier entered the drawing-room. He seemed in high spirits.~“ 19 II, II | When they returned to the drawing-room the moon had risen above 20 II, II | they spent the hours in the drawing-room.~Suddenly the Countess said: “ 21 II, III| passed to the shadow of her drawing-room, then to that of her bedroom. 22 II, III| they all returned to the drawing-room. Madame de Corbelle and 23 II, III| understood that, in her own drawing-room, where until now she alone 24 II, III| swiftly into the little drawing-room near by, where he often 25 II, IV | Annette, in the little back drawing-room, and was still working on 26 II, IV | the shadowy corner of the drawing-room.~The Countess took from 27 II, IV | the door open in the outer drawing-room, and Olivier, disturbed 28 II, IV | the other evening in her drawing-room, when her guests had compared 29 II, V | drinking coffee in the large drawing-room, in a merry mood. The Count, 30 II, V | government. The air of the drawing-room was warm with that first 31 II, V | hours was darkening the drawing-room, burying them little by 32 II, V | quite as if they were in a drawing-room. The attendants moved about, 33 II, V | write in the tapestried drawing-room, her mind, distracted for 34 II, VI | Annette was alone in the drawing-room, standing with her back 35 II, VI | the darkest corner of the drawing-room, toward two armchairs hidden 36 II, VI | subjects until they entered the drawing-room to take coffee. The Countess


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