IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | Search |
Alphabetical [« »] twenty-five 1 twenty-five-franc 1 twisted 1 two 30 tyranny 1 ugly 1 unable 1 | Frequency [« »] 33 little 32 out 31 like 30 two 28 when 27 man 27 very | Guy de Maupassant Sundays of a bourgeois Concordances two |
Chapter
1 1| began to laugh and repeated two or three times: "That's 2 1| stiff from fencing that for two days and two nights he could 3 1| fencing that for two days and two nights he could not get 4 1| would willingly have bought two pair, but one was sufficient. 5 2| themselves of luncheon.~ ~Two restaurants presented themselves. 6 2| aristocracy of the rod. The two owners, born enemies, watched 7 2| green grass. Moreover, these two officials disagreed, one 8 2| started to fish again, but the two new friends left together. 9 3| TWO CELEBRITIES~ ~Monsieur Patissot 10 3| me. I'll introduce you to two celebrities. We will visit 11 3| will visit the homes of two artists."~ ~"But I have 12 3| along. I know that those two are very blase about everything, 13 3| must have cost him at least two millions!" As Patissot left 14 3| A pretty old church with two towers appeared on the left. 15 3| monumental fireplace, flanked by two stone men, could have burned 16 3| them, bowed, motioned to two seats, and turned back to 17 3| bounding resonance of the two vowels.~ ~When the journalist 18 3| was a dismissal, and the two men, a little confused, 19 3| as the eye could see. The two visitors, delighted, congratulated 20 3| quite a little."~ ~The two men left. The journalist, 21 4| upside down, near the driver two rough fellows were joking, 22 4| A laugh ran round the two benches. Patissot understood 23 5| was already occupied by two gentlemen who wore the red 24 5| But when she had eaten two or three of the little oily 25 5| Fourmaise, the builder.~ ~Two respectable-looking gentlemen, 26 5| the water, stood with its two arches across a little arm 27 6| frantic applause greeted these two bits of eloquence. After 28 6| Now, let us add, perhaps, two hundred men with a decided 29 6| staff of eleven thousand two hundred and five minds. 30 6| cannot decide between these two forms of government; I declare