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Alphabetical [« »] mouldering 1 mouldy 1 mount 43 mountain 30 mountains 41 mounted 88 mounting 14 | Frequency [« »] 30 maritornes 30 midst 30 miserable 30 mountain 30 officers 30 printed 30 raising | Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra Don Quixote Concordances mountain |
Parte, Chap.
1 I, TransPre| their origin to the same mountain district in the North of 2 I, TransPre| in the Montana," as the mountain region extending from the 3 I, V| left him wounded on the mountain side, a story known by heart 4 I, IX| virginity about them, from mountain to mountain and valley to 5 I, IX| about them, from mountain to mountain and valley to valley-for, 6 I, IX| proving useless-as if a mountain had fallen on him, he began 7 I, XIII| was required to reach the mountain, the scene of the burial, 8 I, XIII| body, and the foot of that mountain is the place where he ordered 9 I, XXIII| cut over one side of the mountain, while he himself went by 10 I, XXIII| made the circuit of the mountain they found lying in a ravine, 11 I, XXIII| them on the summit of the mountain the goatherd in charge of 12 I, XXIII| man go bounding along the mountain side, and he was now filled 13 I, XXIII| search for him all over the mountain, not leaving a corner or 14 I, XXIII| moment, in a gorge on the mountain that opened where they stood, 15 I, XXIV| his hiding-place on the mountain. Sancho rose, and with the 16 I, XXV| most rugged part of the mountain, Sancho all the while dying 17 I, XXV| reached the foot of a high mountain which stood like an isolated 18 I, XXV| unceasingly the leaves of these mountain trees, in testimony and 19 I, XXVI| follow here:~ ~Ye on the mountain side that grow,~ Ye green 20 I, XXVII| to get him away from the mountain where he then was. The landlord 21 I, XLI| foot of a huge and lofty mountain, not so close to the sea 22 I, XLI| climbed a long way up the mountain, for even there we could 23 I, LI| the flighty Leandra in a mountain cave, stript to her shift, 24 I, LI| carried her away to a rugged mountain and shut her up in the eave 25 II, XVII| to must be bigger than a mountain."~ ~"Fear at any rate," 26 II, XX| burning a middling-sized mountain of faggots, and six stewpots 27 II, XXXV| with gold goes lightly up a mountain,' and that 'gifts break 28 II, XXXVIII| are enough to bring down a mountain, not to say a tender young 29 II, XLIV| forest rude,~ Or gloomy mountain cave?~ ~ O Dulcinea may 30 II, XLVIII| himself, for he came of a mountain stock. We did not carry