Parte,  Chap.

 1   I,  TransPre| opportunity except in the first twenty years of his life; and his
 2   I,  TransPre|      natural daughter, and then twenty years of age.~ ~With his
 3   I,  TransPre|      about three years he wrote twenty or thirty plays, which he
 4   I,  TransPre|        to produce "Don Quixote" twenty years afterwards?~ ~The
 5   I,         I|       past forty, a niece under twenty, and a lad for the field
 6   I,      XIII|         two high mountains some twenty shepherds, all clad in sheepskins
 7   I,        XV|           if they are more than twenty, and we no more than two,
 8   I,        XV|        sighs, and a hundred and twenty maledictions and execrations
 9   I,      XVII|         inn, who were more than twenty persons, stood watching
10   I,       XIX|   afterwards they made out some twenty encamisados, all on horseback,
11   I,      XXII|         ducats."~ ~"I will give twenty with pleasure to get you
12   I,      XXII|      right time I had had those twenty ducats that your worship
13   I,    XXVIII|        and before they had gone twenty paces they discovered behind
14   I,      XXXI|     have heard say is more than twenty thousand leagues round about,
15   I,       XLI|        a place called Shershel, twenty leagues from Algiers on
16   I,       XLI|        then, because there were twenty ships out on a cruise and
17   I,       XLV|       to practise for more than twenty years, and I know the implements
18   I,        LI|        ten suits of clothes and twenty plumes. Do not look upon
19   I,        LI| bewitched her (for he gave away twenty copies of every one he made),
20  II,       XIV|      Quixote had not moved away twenty paces when he heard himself
21  II,    XXVIII|        Sancho, "it must be over twenty years, three days more or
22  II,    XXVIII|      sayest, Sancho, that it is twenty years since I promised thee
23  II,     XXXII|       world than may lie within twenty or thirty leagues round),
24  II,      XXXV|         not to have yet reached twenty. Beside her was a figure
25  II,       XLV|       him; he said he had about twenty ducats in a leather purse
26  II,      LIII|    corridor a band of more than twenty persons with lighted torches
27  II,        LX|         youth, apparently about twenty years of age, clad in green
28  II,        LX|        two fall to each man and twenty remain over; let ten be
29  II,     LXIII| imagined. He did not seem to be twenty years of age.~ ~"Tell me,
30  II,      LXVI|        is so fat that he weighs twenty stone challenged another,
31  II,      LXVI|        and that in this way the twenty stone of the thin man would
32  II,      LXVI|        thin man would equal the twenty stone of the fat one."~ ~"
33  II,      LXXI|       headstall retreated about twenty paces from his master among
34  II,     LXXIV| housekeeper has served me, with twenty ducats, over and above,
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