ВУЗ: Не указан
Категория: Не указан
Дисциплина: Не указана
Добавлен: 04.04.2024
Просмотров: 142
Скачиваний: 3
B O U N D E D |
101 - |
B R O K E N |
||
|
|
BOUNDED — UNBOUNDED |
||
And |
in |
this position |
the old man... at length chanced |
|
to |
see |
him: to his |
unbounded |
astonishment. |
Curiosity, 90
... ne was never in her society without that happy con sciousness of shining which calls forth the treasures of the man; and these it is no exaggeration to term unbounded...
Egoist, 108—109
BOWED — UNBOWED
We’ll lace the music, and our heads should be bloody but unbowed.
His head was |
End, |
429 |
empty, but unbowed; he spoke quickly |
||
and finished |
almost angrily. |
|
|
Pounds, |
157 |
BREAKABLE — UNBREAKABLE
BROKEN — UNBROKEN
... the one understanding thought, which would have made their union final and unbreakable...
Hullo, 32
In a peculiar way MacGregor had been unbreakable because he had never cared one way or the other about the job he was doing.
Diplomat, 216
He could feel it quite clearly now... absolute unbroken stillness in a man.
1 Wish, 10
“ ... two men with an eye for a picture saw St. Clare’s broken sword.” — “ No,” cried Father Brown, with a sharp voice like a pistol shot, “ but who saw his unbroken sword?”
'Brown, 265
B U R D E N |
—102 — |
C A L C U L A T E D |
BURDEN — a) UNBURDEN b) DISBURDEN
A dim sentiment of impropriety in unburdening his overcharged mind... restrained him from defending himself...
Egoist, 475
I teel the need of unburdening myself of it to some one.
Octopus, 207
Having now disburdened himself of his great surprise, the schoolmaster sat down.
Curiosity, 446
BUTTON — UNBUTTON
She began to unbutton her dress...
Hullo, 29
The suit of clothes, now all unbuttoned and hanging loosely upon its unseen supports, stood up, arms a-kimbo.
Invisible, 54
CALCULABLE — INCALCULABLE
CALCULATED — UNCALCULATED
All is caprice: the calculable world has become incal culable.
Too True, 301
Nobody knew whether there was anything in him except an incalculable number of secrets.
End, |
180 |
The uncalculated honesty of it flattered her not a |
lit |
tle. |
|
Tragedy, 85
C A P A B L E |
103 — |
C E R E M O N IO U S |
CAPABLE — INCAPABLE
CAPACITY — INCAPACITY
Doc was a pure scientist and incapable of superstition...
Cannery, 120
We agreed he was capable of almost anything and we agreed he was incapable of hurting his master...
Who Knew, 68
It is true that righteousness should triumph over the tyrant and the robber, but have carelessness and in capacity any right to triumph over capacity and fore sight?
Britling, 350
... his tongue seemed fluent; his Incapacity for the in articulate utterance of his inner thoughts forgotten.
Hatter’s, 304
CAUTIOUS — INCAUTIOUS
... setting aside any additional impulse to curiosity
which |
we might have derived from Dick’s incau |
tious |
manner. |
|
Curiosity, 204 |
The complicated richness of the dresses, the yards and yards of fine stitchery, the endless ruching, the hints, more or less incautious, of nether treasures of embroi dered linen...
Wives, 346
CEREMONIOUS — UNCEREMONIOUS CEREMONIOUSLY — UNCEREMONIOUSLY
After a very unceremonious and scrambling breakfast...
they took leave of the landlord.
Curiosity, 173
C E R E M O N I O U S |
104 - |
C H A L L E N G E D |
He could not {ell how unceremonious the parting had
been...
Crusaders, 619
He unceremoniously let himself out by the side-door...
Wives, 309
Asquith saved him from the Australian by unceremo niously pushing Mr. Murphy out of the way...
Diplomat, 517
CERTAIN — UNCERTAIN
CERTAINTY — UNCERTAINTY
He stood uncertain, then, seeing her, came to the empty seat on her other side.
End, 77
The great voice of the English people had spoken in no uncertain tones, and George Augustus was not deaf to the message.
Death, 86
Yes, in times of uncertainty, it was a very sensible idea
to be |
prepared |
for any emergency. |
|
|
|
Tomorrow, |
276 |
She felt |
an extreme desire to hurt him, to blame |
him |
|
for all her own |
uncertainties. |
189 |
|
|
|
Hullo, |
CHALLENGED — UNCHALLENGED
But how could you fight them if you had Dondolos in your own ranks, unchallenged and unchallengeable?
|
Crusaders, 59 |
Now of the Ice House, |
George William Vertigan, owner |
of the Blue Bazaar, |
was unchallenged monarch. |
Arrowsmith, 345
C H A N G E D |
105 - |
C H A R T E D |
CHANGED — UNCHANGED
CHANGING — UNCHANGING
CHANGEABLE— UNCHANGEABLE
You have not changed. You are absolutely unchanged.
Egoist, 50
Day by day the courses of law are stony and unchanged.
End, 211
... to call to witness his unchanging truth and mind fulness of bygone days, whole years of desolation.
Curiosi ty, 620
But to escape her, of course — this unreasonable, un shakable, unchangeable demand of hers!
Tragedy, 462
And what have I done? I am the same unchangeable.
Egoist, 483
CHARITABLE — UNCHARITABLE
... had she been an uncharitable woman, she could have ruled the county with an iron rod of caricature...
Egoist, 32
An uncharitable person might at once label such a be haviour as opportunist.
|
|
|
Tomorrow, 70 |
|
CHARTED — UNCHARTED |
|
|||
What uncharted country was |
she |
not |
entering |
with |
just a star to guide! |
|
|
End, 351 |
|
|
|
|
||
If I had found Bill so deeply |
and |
richly |
human |
might |
I not come to love the yet uncharted Fritz Beinke and the Swede Barber...
Hack, 171
7 Заказ 818
C H A S T E |
|
106 |
C IV IL IZ E D |
|
CHASTE — UNCHASTE |
|
|
“ It is the |
thought of |
Alice,’ ’ Teddy said, |
“ unchaste |
thoughts |
are running |
riot.” |
|
Room, 130
... she felt dimly that her body would remain unchaste until he would marry her.
Hatter's, 159
CHECKED — UNCHECKED
The downpour fell with the heavy uninterrupted rush of a sweeping flood, with a sound of unchecked over whelming fury...
Jim , 179
But all the while Martin was weary of unchecked sta tistics.
Arrowsmith, 226
CHEQUERED — UNCHEQUERED
... the monotonous days unchequered by variety and uncheered by pleasant companionship.
Curiosity, 84
Soames had been her mainstay throughout thirty-four years chequered by Montague Darty, had continued her mainstay in the thirteen unchequered years since.
Swan, 315
CIVILIZED — UNCIVILIZED
Sometimes you think it’s soft and sometimes sly, and sometimes murderous, and sometimes uncivilized; and all the time it’s only civilized...
Who Knew, 187
He considers them all crude and uncivilized.
Diplomat, 303
C L A S P |
107 -- |
CLINCH |
CLASP — UNCLASP
As they rode — in complete silence for a while — her hands clasped and unclasped definitely.
|
Financier, |
338 |
|
Gordon laughed in delight, but it was |
only as |
real |
as |
his clasping and unclasping hands |
would |
permit. |
|
|
Heroes, |
181 |
CLEAN — UNCLEAN
CLEANNESS — UNCLEANNESS
... the face painted on the canvas could grow bestial, sodden, and unclean.
Picture, 154
Let’s have a bath before tea and wash away these un clean thoughts.
Room, 209
... some bite suddenly, none giving occasion; some love uncleanness.
Moreau, 95
She trembled with deep shame, a feeling of uncleanness...
Hullo, 45
CLINCH — UNCLINCH
They swayed back clinched together against the gate; then, both, as if struck by the same idea unclinched and raised their fists.
' End, 495
She emphasized it all with her hands, which she clinch ed and unclinched in a dramatic way.
Tragedy, 438
7*
C L O SE |
108 - |
CO H E R E N C Y |
|
|
CLOSE — UNCLOSE |
|
|
... and |
uneasily closing and unclosing his hands with |
||
out a |
moment’s intermission, stood |
swinging |
him |
self from side to side, waiting to be addressed. |
|
||
|
|
Martin, |
474 |
He stopped, his face a greyish white, his hands closing and unclosing.
Say, 225
CLOUDED — UNCLOUDED
And I beheld unclouded by doubt, a magnificent vision of all that invisibility might mean to a man.
Invisible, 108
God give me unclouded eyes and freedom from haste.
Arrowsmith, 280
COHERENT — INCOHERENT
COHERENTLY — INCOHERENTLY
COHERENCY — INCOHERENCY
COHERENCE — INCOHERENCE
... the man who stood there shouting some incoherent explanation...
Invisible, 51
... talking too fast, getting incoherent with foiled zeal...
Hullo, 139
... the forgotten memories of her youth which rushed incoherently in upon her.
|
|
Hatter’s, |
124 |
... he also babbled incoherently of his mother... |
|
||
|
|
Love, |
37 |
...who... was the occasion |
of any |
slight incoherency |
|
he might observe in his |
speech at |
the moment... |
|
Curiosity, 202
C O H E R E N C Y |
109 - |
CO M FO RTABLY |
On every hand one heard the scraping of violins... the suave accents of ‘art talks,’ the incoherencies of poets...
Octopus, 297
Something elusive, and yet something that in spite of
the |
superficial |
incoherence of its phrasing was large |
ly |
essentially |
true. |
|
|
Ann, 229 |
|
COLOURED — UNCOLOURED |
On those walls, wherever the eye roved, were prints coloured and uncoloured, old and new, depicting the sports of racing and prize-fighting.
White, 79
Sophia then experienced a pure and primitive emotion, uncoloured by any moral or religious quality.
Wives, |
611 |
COMFORTABLE — UNCOMFORTABLE |
|
COMFORTABLY — UNCOMFORTABLY |
|
COMFORT — DISCOMFORT |
|
Now I was feeling pretty comfortable all down |
one |
side, and pretty uncomfortable all up the other. |
|
Adventure, |
425 |
Alec always felt a bit uncomfortable when Kath was
coquetting like this with her chuckling father...
Hullo, 15
“Beautiful these autumn flowers are,” said Ann Veron ica in a wide, uncomfortable pause.
Ann, 51
Some of the girls laughed, others frowned uncomfort ably.
Hullo, 115
C O M FO R T A B L Y |
ПО — |
C O M P A R A B L E |
He moved uncomfortably in his chair, not knowing how to begin.
Hatter's, 153
There was not enough intimacy between them to jus tify his discomfort.
I Wish, 24
Two or three chairs, full of age and discomfort, stood upon a carpet...
Pomona’s, 137
The event was discomforting to him.
Egoist, 103
COMMON — UNCOMMON
COMMONLY — UNCOMMONLY
Lady Windermere has that uncommon thing called common sense.
Lady, 54
I was desired by that gentleman to identify the wearer of a very uncommon coat...
|
|
Posthumous, |
41 |
Kit was a shock-headed |
shambling awkward lad with |
||
an |
uncommonly wide |
mouth. |
|
|
|
Curiosity, |
15 |
I call |
it uncommonly clever... |
|
|
|
|
Brown, |
354 |
COMPARABLE — INCOMPARABLE
... to judge from the tenour of his letters, really incom parable letters!
Egoist, 47
... the commercial traveller had with Incomparable rash fatuity thrown the paper pellet over the counter...
Wives, 381