1 To her heart I confided much of what has since been so hideously realised.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VII 2 Suddenly he started, saved again perhaps from swooning by an uncanny and hideous sight.
3 If you'd invented another theory you might perhaps have done something a thousand times more hideous.
4 Yes, she is so dark-skinned and looks like a soldier dressed up, but you know she is not at all hideous.
5 The hideous and agonisingly fearful sensation he had felt then began to come back more and more vividly.
6 Some idea, some hint, as it were, slipped, something awful, hideous, and suddenly understood on both sides.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 4: CHAPTER III 7 There was always a crowd there, always shouting, laughter and abuse, hideous hoarse singing and often fighting.
8 At the time he had put no faith in those dreams and was only tantalising himself by their hideous but daring recklessness.
9 There was something infinitely hideous and shocking in that laugh, in those eyes, in such nastiness in the face of a child.
10 Katerina Ivanovna in her old dress with the green shawl, wearing a torn straw hat, crushed in a hideous way on one side, was really frantic.
11 We may note in passing, one peculiarity in regard to all the final resolutions taken by him in the matter; they had one strange characteristic: the more final they were, the more hideous and the more absurd they at once became in his eyes.
12 Now, a month later, he had begun to look upon them differently, and, in spite of the monologues in which he jeered at his own impotence and indecision, he had involuntarily come to regard this "hideous" dream as an exploit to be attempted, although he still did not realise this himself.