1 "In this grey house," said Razumihin.
2 He had a straight-forward, sensible, soldierly face, with grey moustaches and whiskers.
3 He glanced with a defiant and desperate air at the porter, who without a word held out a grey folded paper sealed with bottle-wax.
4 I assure you I am proud of these breeches, and he exhibited to Raskolnikov a pair of light, summer trousers of grey woollen material.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 5 Wringing his hands and screaming, he rushed up to the grey-headed old man with the grey beard, who was shaking his head in disapproval.
6 His flaxen hair was still abundant, and only touched here and there with grey, and his thick square beard was even lighter than his hair.
7 It was a grey and heavy day, the country was exactly as he remembered it; indeed he recalled it far more vividly in his dream than he had done in memory.
8 At that moment other steps were heard; the crowd in the passage parted, and the priest, a little, grey old man, appeared in the doorway bearing the sacrament.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 9 Her thin, light hair, streaked with grey, thickly smeared with grease, was plaited in a rat's tail and fastened by a broken horn comb which stood out on the nape of her neck.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 10 At the great closed gates of the house, a little man stood with his shoulder leaning against them, wrapped in a grey soldier's coat, with a copper Achilles helmet on his head.
11 He had on a light grey fashionable loose coat, light summer trousers, and everything about him loose, fashionable and spick and span; his linen was irreproachable, his watch-chain was massive.
12 Her hair had begun to grow grey and thin, there had long been little crow's foot wrinkles round her eyes, her cheeks were hollow and sunken from anxiety and grief, and yet it was a handsome face.
13 An elegant carriage stood in the middle of the road with a pair of spirited grey horses; there was no one in it, and the coachman had got off his box and stood by; the horses were being held by the bridle.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 14 The persons still in the tavern were a man who appeared to be an artisan, drunk, but not extremely so, sitting before a pot of beer, and his companion, a huge, stout man with a grey beard, in a short full-skirted coat.
15 Even his hair, touched here and there with grey, though it had been combed and curled at a hairdresser's, did not give him a stupid appearance, as curled hair usually does, by inevitably suggesting a German on his wedding-day.