Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre|       the community. Men of wit, taste, and discrimination among
 2   I,  TransPre|          him that he had hit the taste of the public, Cervantes
 3   I,  TransPre|   correct and educate the public taste until it was ripe for tragedies
 4   I,  TransPre| gentleman, with instinctive good taste and a great deal of shrewdness
 5   I,  TransPre|    ignorance, imbecility, or bad taste.~ ~It is true that to do
 6   I,         I|         his horse so much to his taste, he was anxious to get one
 7   I,       XII|      choice according to her own taste, she never gave any other
 8   I,       XIV|     covet not that of others; my taste is for freedom, and I have
 9   I,       XVI|     briefly that we hardly get a taste of them, all the substance
10   I,      XVII|      kindred!-why did you let me taste it?"~ ~At this moment the
11   I,     XVIII|         perceived by the colour, taste, and smell, that it was
12   I,     XXIII|          if this were not to his taste, at least to come and ask
13   I,      XXIV|    excellence you describe had a taste for such delightful reading
14   I,      XXIV|          merely hearing what her taste was, I declare her to be
15   I,      XXVI|    dinner-time, and he longed to taste something hot as it had
16   I,      XXVI|         engaged very much to his taste doing penance in the midst
17   I,      XXIX|          be a man of very little taste when he rejected such charms.
18   I,     XXXII|        advantage and even to the taste of some; but I hope the
19   I,    XXXIII|         other things more to her taste, and wanting that time and
20   I,     XLVII|    though, led by idle and false taste, I have read the beginnings
21   I,    XLVIII|     paying any attention to good taste or the rules of art, by
22   I,    XLVIII|        of his desire to suit the taste of the actors, they have
23  II,        IV|      what is more, my bread will taste as well, and perhaps even
24  II,       XIV|          this knight, more to my taste and better than from the
25  II,       XVI|     stint of anything. I have no taste for tattle, nor do I allow
26  II,       XVI|       being not very much to his taste, Sancho had turned aside
27  II,     XVIII|     memory whereof is pain.~ One taste, methinks, of bygone bliss~
28  II,        XX|          the town who had a nice taste in devising things of the
29  II,       XLI|           I'm no witch to have a taste for travelling through the
30  II,     XLVII|      could get at it, not to say taste it, already the wand had
31  II,     XLVII|         be no dessert more to my taste than your portrait."~ ~"
32  II,       LIX|          for anything more to my taste; and I don't care a pin
33  II,       LXX|      would have been more to his taste to sleep in a hovel alone,
34  II,       LXX|         for everybody gives it a taste of his foot. I am not disturbed
35  II,     LXXII|    Manchegan displayed such good taste that he disabused Don Alvaro
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