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F E A R |
- 53 — |
F I N E |
They had argued so much round their fears and hopes during the last few days.
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Spring, |
27 |
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FEMALE — MALE |
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... all |
these vagabonds, |
male |
and female... |
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Oliver, |
412 |
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This of course applies |
to all |
individuals, |
of course |
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male |
or female... |
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Some |
Came, |
812 |
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FEW — MANY
... whether they were many days or few, appeared of
little moment now...
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Dombey, |
287 |
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“ They are few, |
and |
I can |
buy |
them.’ ’ — “ Nay, |
they |
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are many and |
we |
will |
go |
together...” |
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For |
Whom, |
343 |
... brought even |
more |
bloated |
profits to |
the few and |
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more bitter probations |
to the many. |
Name, |
26 |
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FIND — LOSE
Once I went far into the valley... where Lorna had found and lost her young cousin.
Lorna, 126
You do that when you’ve lost a horseshoe that you’ve found, instead of nailing it up over the door.
Adventures, 214
FINE — WET
And every Sunday afternoon I went up there, wet and fine, though I knew as well as you do it wasn’t no good by day.
Fairyland, 287
F I N E |
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54 - |
F O O L I SH L Y |
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Г 11 |
pick |
you |
up in |
front of Foch at |
two o ’clock, |
wet |
or |
fine. |
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End, |
355 |
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FINISH — START |
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Avidly, |
with |
quickening breath, Ellen Baird read |
the |
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article |
from start |
to finish. |
Tomorrow, |
35 |
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And Lampton was, of course, merely a sergeant-observ er from start to finish.
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Room, |
167 |
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FIRST — LAST |
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That’s |
what all of you gentlemen split on, first |
and |
last. |
Treasure, |
80 |
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From first to last Marjorie was extremely careful to avoid the affectionate scrutiny of her mother’s eye.
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Marriage, |
143 |
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FOLLY — WISDOM |
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FOOLISHLY — WISELY |
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FOOLISHNESS — WISDOM |
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Unless he |
remained within the shelter of the Pension, |
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he could |
not hope to |
complete successfully his |
re |
conversion from folly |
to wisdom. |
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Wives, |
490 |
Ay; and what has held him baffled at the gate all these
months? Was it my folly, as you deem it, or your wis dom?
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Caesar, |
338 |
All |
of us had an ample share of the treasure, and |
used |
it |
wisely or foolishly, according to our natures. |
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Treasure, 221
F O O L I S H N E S S |
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F R I E N D |
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There |
is |
great |
wisdom in |
the simplicity |
of |
a beast, |
let |
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me |
tell |
you; |
and sometimes great foolishness in |
the |
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wisdom |
of |
scholars. |
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Joan, |
576 |
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Behind |
her back |
they |
jested |
about |
her |
foolishness; |
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but |
after |
all |
wisdom isn’t a process, it ’s |
a result, |
it’s |
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the |
fruit |
of |
the |
tree. |
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Hurly-Burly, |
23 |
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FORGET — REMEMBER |
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He does |
it |
and |
forgets it. We |
remember it. |
Ann, |
270 |
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Soldiers must not forget, they said, soldiers must not remember; all that is treason.
From Here, 384
FRESH — STALE
They encountered more weeds in the bar-room, some of whom... were pretty stale in one sense, and pretty fresh in another.
Martin, 339
It was the ancient attraction of the fresh for the stale.
Sister, 115
FRIEND — ENEMY
I asked for us to be friends, Margaret, not enemies.
All Men, 146
I know all the men who rule this country — friend and enemy.
Heroes, 223
FRIEND — FOE
Your Missis has not been my friend; she has been my foe.
Jane, 58
F R I E N D |
56 |
GAI N |
Friend or foe meant nothing on a word.
Heroes, 110
FRIENDLY — HOSTILE
... he would not recognize that the great proportion of human beings are more readily hostile than friendly.
Britling, 274
... her expression was neither hostile nor friendly.
Hatter’s, 536
FROM — TO
... went in and, to and from, sundry places of mercantile resort.
Dombey, II, 242
.. his journeys to and from the village.
Cross, 221
GAIN — LOSE
GAIN — LOSS
... honesty being my golden rule, whether I gain |
by it |
or lose, and I find that I generally lose... |
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Bleak, |
710 |
What one loses on the swings one gains on the round abouts.
Homecoming, 228
People went along, living their lives as best they could, not gaining much may be, but not losing greatly either...
From Here, 394
“ Let us weigh the gain and loss,” he quoted, “ in wager ing that God is, let us estimate these two chances. If you gained, you gain all; if you lose, you lose nothing. ’ '
Quiet, 149
GAIN |
- 57 - |
GIVE |
But it isn’t always so simple to reckon up your gains and losses.
Spring, 491
GENERAL — PARTICULAR
...why mention the particular when the general would serve.
End, 616
... the undesirability of warfare in general, and during winter in particular.
Crusaders, 444
GIANT — PIGMY
“So you think your friend in the city will be hard upon me, if I fail in a payment?” says the trooper, looking
down upon |
him like |
a giant. — “ My dear friend, I |
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am afraid |
he will,” |
returns the old man looking |
up |
at him like a pigmy. |
Bleak, |
314 |
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A pigmy’s a giant if he can manage to arrive in season.
Egoist, 360
GIVE — RECEIVE
...philanthropy when practised in a business way is an art that blesses him who gives as well as him who receives.
Philanthropy, 199
We know what we give, we cannot know what we re ceive.
All Men, 76
GIVE — TAKE
... it’s one thing to give orders, and quite another thing to take’em.
Dombey, 86
GI VE |
— 58 - |
G R EA T |
You want to be private, you don’t want to give and take like an ordinary man.
Homecoming, 163
GLAD — SORRY
I am not sorry... I am glad I did it.
Hope, 202
This was how it always ended, and I didn’t know whether to be sorry or glad.
Room, 176
GOOD — HARM
Whether it will do us harm or good remains to be seen.
End, 477
He must have been doing more harm than good around here.
For Whom, 21
GOOD — ILL
He had attained to a fatalistic acceptance of all natural dispensations, good or ill.
Thousand, 105
It was a flaw or set of flaws, which both for good and ill, shaped much of how I affected others...
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Homecoming, 48 |
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GREAT — LITTLE |
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There |
are |
no great |
revenges but |
only little mean ones. |
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Britling, 390 |
..it’s |
of very |
little |
importance |
to you, I know... but |
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It’s |
pf |
very |
great importance |
to me... |
Martin, 294
G R E A T |
59 — |
G U I L T |
GREAT — SMALL
... it deserves consideration in all dealings with the doctor, great or small.
Copperfield, 22
There was a perfect plague of state banks, great and small, in those days...
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Financier, |
5 |
... he used all men, great and small, that came |
near |
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him, as his instruments ... |
318 |
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History, |
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The great |
create an atmosphere which reacts badly |
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upon the |
small. |
281 |
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Sister, |
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GRIEF — JOY |
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I have seen her . in her grief and I have seen her in her joy...
Dombey, 11, 211
... he knew from the way she sobbed that her grief was mingled with joy.
Tomorrow, 273
GUILTY — INNOCENT GUILT — INNOCENCE
... requiring to be cleared if innocent, and punished with the utmost rigour of the law, if guilty.
Bleak, 476
So the law assumes there must be one guilty party, and one innocent party who has been wronged by deser tion of the matrimonial bed.
All Men, 471
... how they had been perfectly distracted between the strong proofs of his guilt, and their own fading hopes of his innocence.
Curiosity, 507