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Updated: May 5, 2025


"Anan!" said Mr Briggs, again lost in perplexity and wonder. "Oh yet," continued Albany, turning towards Cecilia, "preach not here the hardness which ye practice; rather amend yourselves than corrupt her; and give with liberality what ye ought to receive with gratitude!"

"I am quite assomme, Sir," returned the Captain, "to disturb you, but I must really hint you don't comprehend me: the ladies are extremely inconvenienced by these sort of sights, and we make it a principle they should never be accablees with them." "Anan!" cried Mr Briggs, staring. "I say, Sir," replied the Captain, "the ladies are quite au desespoir that you will not cover your head."

Verty continued to gaze toward Redbud, who was gathering flowers. "How kind and good she is!" he murmured. And these words were accompanied by a smile of so much tender sincerity, that Fanny relented. "Yes, she is!" said that young lady; "I'm glad to see that some of your sex, sir, have a little taste. It is not their failing." "Anan!" said Verty, smiling.

"Yees, your honour," said the man, scratching his head, "I think it be; they are my ees, and G, and D, sure enough." "And do you know the purport of the will you signed?" "Anan!" "I mean, do you know to whom Sir William stop, Mr. Oswald, suffer the man to answer me to whom Sir William left his property?"

"Hum! yes, sir; there is a certain amount of irrationality in any body desiring such a thing not in you especially." "Oh, Mr. Roundjacket, you advised me only a few weeks ago to be always courting somebody courting was the word; I recollect it." "Hum!" repeated Roundjacket; "did I?" "Yes, sir." "Well, sir, I suppose a man has a right to amend." "Anan, sir?"

Ano, to Man, | Dat. Anoi, to Men. Ac. Anan, Man, | Ac. Ananda, Men. Voc. Hil-an, O Man, | Voc. Hil-Ananda, O Men. In the elder inflectional literature the dual form existed it has long been obsolete. The genitive case with them is also obsolete; the dative supplies its place: they say the House 'to' a Man, instead of the House 'of' a Man.

‘Why, to a first-rate bonnet, as I think you would prove, I could afford to give from forty to fifty shillings a week.’ ‘Is it possible?’ said I. ‘Good wages, ain’t they?’ said the man. ‘First-rate,’ said I; ‘bonneting is more profitable than reviewing.’ ‘Anan?’ said the man. ‘Or translating; I don’t think the Armenian would have paid me at that rate for translating his Esop.’

He looked at the sword wonderingly. "Stand back!" cried Jinks, "or thou art dead, young man! Turn your horse into that receptacle of animals again, and go not toward the Bower of Nature!" "Anan?" said the young man, calmly. "So you pretend not to understand, do you!

"This place makes me go to sleep," said the boy. "How dull it is!" "Dull! do you call this office dull? No, sir, as long as I am here this place is sprightly and even poetical." "Anan?" said Verty. "Which means, in Iroquois or some barbarous language, that you don't understand," replied Mr. Roundjacket.

"And look'ee, my ben cull, if I was to offer ye all Bartlemy's treasure which I can't, mark me still you'd never gather just what manner o' hook that was. Anan, says you mum, boy, says I. Howbeit, I say, 'tis a good song," quoth he, blinking drowsily at the fire, "here's battle in't, murder and sudden death and wha what more could ye expect of any song aye, and there's women in't too!"

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