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 1     I,       I   |        the age of three he could speak very nicely, but at that
 2     I,       I   |       age of five, and could not speak up to his tenth year; then
 3     I,     III   |       will be a good boy. I will speak!"~ ~It is marvellous enough
 4     I,     III   |          how this child comes to speak Hungarian?" said I, turning
 5     I,      IV   |         it because he could only speak Hungarian? But then, how
 6     I,      IV   |           But then, how could he speak to his father? Who had taught
 7     I,      IV   |        Who had taught the boy to speak that peculiar language,
 8     I,      IV   |        abundance. Every word you speak will by each reporter be
 9     I,      IV   |        son of a count, who could speak only Latin, and not a word
10     I,      IV   |          his son should learn to speak it?~ ~During the drive Mr.
11     I,      IV   | Hungarian witticism that when we speak of Hungarian art we cannot
12     I,      VI   |      again, although I wanted to speak and tried very hard. A snake
13     I,      VI   |          He always used to say, 'Speak to me, my boy, only to me!
14     I,      VI   |          have nobody but thee to speak to me in our own Hungarian;'
15     I,      VI   |      much more refined when they speak bad French instead of good
16     I,     VII   |   relations, and I shall have to speak of my Uncle Diogenes.~ ~ ~ ~
17     I         (1)|          Jews in Hungary usually speak German among themselves.~ ~
18     I,    VIII   |        one day I took courage to speak to my father upon the subject,
19     I,    VIII   |       nothing.~ ~But I wanted to speak to you of my Uncle Diogenes,
20     I,    VIII   |         sharp than at the time I speak of.~ ~"Happy to see you,
21     I,      IX   |         picture of happiness. "I speak of heaven," he continued, "
22     I,      IX   |       ever spoken, or shall ever speak about it. You think this
23     I,      IX   |       doctor, and as such I must speak to you."~ ~"Do you know
24     I,      IX   |     Pandora's box. At the time I speak of, that box was in Benedetti'
25     I,       X   |         told them that I did not speak for myself, as I did not
26     I,     XII   |         I persisted, "and I must speak plainly. You know that I
27     I,     XII   |          banquet, and the papers speak admiringly of your bountiful
28     I,     XII   |       will give you, and perhaps speak a few gracious words; but
29     I,     XII   |        Virgilius Maro, and could speak or write in hexameters,
30    II,       I   |         that it must hurt her to speak, and therefore she liked
31    II,      IV   |        is I who have business to speak of with you, and quickly,
32    II,     VII   |      sake of an alibi."~ ~"Don't speak of that! She told me all
33    II,      XI   |        to France. War was, so to speak, floating in the air, and
34    II,    XIII   |         run for our lives, so to speak, and here they are talking
35    II,     XIV   |       gory field of honour might speak to his wife of his wounds
36    II,      XV   |     business, said I, had she to speak fair of me before this crowd?~ ~"
37    II,    XVII   |          spent officially, so to speak - that is to say, on herself
38    II,    XVII   |          time that we shall ever speak with or behold each other
39    II,    XVII   |    regaining his lost speech, to speak Hungarian, and you know
40    II,    XVII   |       you know who taught him to speak that language. The child
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