1 Yes, yes; you are perfectly right.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 2 Dirt and disorder, a perfect Bedlam.
3 Meanwhile there was a perfect pool of blood.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 4 One of the prisoners rushed at him in a perfect frenzy.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 5 Though Pulcheria Alexandrovna was not perfectly convinced, she made no further resistance.
6 But Dounia was vexed, and answered that 'words are not deeds,' and that, of course, is perfectly true.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 7 "Why, people in perfect health act in the same way too," observed Dounia, looking uneasily at Zossimov.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 8 And if you weren't a fool, a common fool, a perfect fool, if you were an original instead of a translation.
9 Even as it is, she was quite right: she was suffering and that was her asset, so to speak, her capital which she had a perfect right to dispose of.
10 Strange to say, he seemed immediately to have become perfectly calm; not a trace of his recent delirium nor of the panic fear that had haunted him of late.
11 Raskolnikov, bewildered, suddenly fell into actual frenzy, but, strange to say, he again obeyed the command to speak quietly, though he was in a perfect paroxysm of fury.
12 He remembered every detail of the previous day and he knew that a perfectly novel experience had befallen him, that he had received an impression unlike anything he had known before.
13 I don't know how you feel about female faces, but to my mind these sixteen years, these childish eyes, shyness and tears of bashfulness are better than beauty; and she is a perfect little picture, too.
14 He was listening to what his mother was saying to his sister, sitting perfectly still with pouting lips and wide-open eyes, just as all good little boys have to sit when they are undressed to go to bed.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 15 He always liked looking at those great cart-horses, with their long manes, thick legs, and slow even pace, drawing along a perfect mountain with no appearance of effort, as though it were easier going with a load than without it.
16 In the first place, it was evident, far too much so indeed, that Pyotr Petrovitch had made eager use of his few days in the capital to get himself up and rig himself out in expectation of his betrothed--a perfectly innocent and permissible proceeding, indeed.
17 He knew, he knew perfectly well that at that moment they were at the flat, that they were greatly astonished at finding it unlocked, as the door had just been fastened, that by now they were looking at the bodies, that before another minute had passed they would guess and completely realise that the murderer had just been there, and had succeeded in hiding somewhere, slipping by them and escaping.
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