1 You've eaten nothing since yesterday, I warrant.
2 "Since yesterday," muttered Raskolnikov in reply.
3 "He's been in a fever since yesterday," she added.
4 I saved it for you yesterday, but you came in late.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 5 "Some of yesterday's," answered Nastasya, who was still standing there.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 6 That was the day before yesterday, I venture to say, if you please, sir.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 7 Yesterday a man said to me that what a man needs is fresh air, fresh air, fresh air.
8 Yesterday and the day before yesterday and all this time I have been worrying myself.
9 Yesterday and the day before yesterday and all this time I have been worrying myself.
10 The difference was that a month ago, yesterday even, the thought was a mere dream: but now.
11 Yesterday I was in great danger and believed I was lost; but to-day things are going better.
12 He gave a sudden start; another thought, that he had had yesterday, slipped back into his mind.
13 All neighbours here, almost all new friends, except my old uncle, and he is new too--he only arrived in Petersburg yesterday to see to some business of his.
14 Yes, he had known it all, and understood it all; it surely had all been settled even yesterday at the moment when he was bending over the box and pulling the jewel-cases out of it.
15 A strange idea suddenly occurred to him, to get up at once, to go up to Nikodim Fomitch, and tell him everything that had happened yesterday, and then to go with him to his lodgings and to show him the things in the hole in the corner.
16 Yesterday evening, before my mother and sister and in his presence, I declared that I had given the money to Katerina Ivanovna for the funeral and not to Sofya Semyonovna and that I had no acquaintance with Sofya Semyonovna and had never seen her before, indeed.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 5: CHAPTER III 17 "Twenty to the policeman, three to Nastasya for the letter, so I must have given forty-seven or fifty to the Marmeladovs yesterday," he thought, reckoning it up for some unknown reason, but he soon forgot with what object he had taken the money out of his pocket.
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