Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
going 77
gold 6
golden 1
gone 36
good 68
good-bye 14
good-evening 4
Frequency    [«  »]
36 almost
36 few
36 gaston
36 gone
36 men
36 year
35 god
Alexandre Dumas, fils
Camille

IntraText - Concordances

gone

   Chapter
1 4 | to-day that I have not even gone to the hotel to which I 2 5 | When she came back, he had gone." ~"And you have never seen 3 5 | is?" ~"I believe he has gone to see Mlle. Gautier's sister." ~" 4 5 | he want there?" ~"He has gone to get her authority to 5 5 | That is why M. Duval has gone to see Mlle. Gautier's sister, 6 6 | me!) that he would have gone out of his mind. Fortunately, 7 7 | come to buy. I might have gone in, but I dared not. I did 8 7 | Marguerite say after I had gone?" ~"She laughed, and said 9 7 | was convalescent and had gone to Bagneres. ~Time went 10 8 | fashionable people in Paris, had gone into business and taken 11 8 | one ever comes when I am gone. Often in the evening I 12 8 | go when they see you have gone." ~"They will turn everything 13 9 | Marguerite, coming back, "he has gone! That man gets frightfully 14 10| So much as that?" ~I had gone too far to draw back; and 15 12| always, and all that had gone before is wiped out from 16 12| Vaudeville. Never had I gone to a theatre so early. The 17 13| He saw her home; he has gone in for a moment, he is not 18 14| written to her, but to have gone to see her, and that then 19 14| me. I replied that I had gone out early in order to reserve 20 15| forgiven you." ~"I should have gone away to-morrow." ~"How can 21 15| turning to me, "Nanine will be gone to bed. You must open the 22 18| she saw us enter. "She has gone again?" asked Marguerite. ~" 23 18| And where has this money gone?" ~"In payments." ~"Is she 24 19| whispers. When Nanine had gone out Marguerite sat down 25 19| Duprat's, where she had gone in preference to going to 26 21| about twelve. My father had gone out. ~I went to my own rooms, 27 21| hoping that he had perhaps gone there. No one had called. 28 22| room. ~"Where is madame?" ~"Gone to Paris," replied Nanine. ~" 29 22| her furniture, and she had gone to Paris to conclude the 30 22| I thought I should have gone mad. For a moment I was 31 23| she had heard that I had gone away, and had thus been 32 23| it was she who has just gone out." ~"Is she afraid of 33 24| One evening Olympe had gone somewhere or other, and 34 24| nothing more." ~When she had gone, I was frightened at the 35 25| day. ~You had only been gone an hour when your father 36 26| heard then that you were gone on a long voyage. There


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