1 At least then I know he knows who I am.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 3 2 He would kill the next person who jumped him.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 2 3 Nup, pal, yer the ones who'd better watch it.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 4 4 We all did around nice girls who were the cousinly type.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 2 5 Nobody else was there except two girls who were sitting down front.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 2 6 It belonged to a guy who kept it at the stables where Soda used to work.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 3 7 In our neighborhood it's rare to find a kid who doesn't drink once in a while.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 8 Tough, loud girls who wore too much eye makeup and giggled and swore too much.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 9 And Johnny, who was the most law-abiding of us, now carried in his back pocket a six-inch switchblade.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 2 10 Quiet, soft-spoken little Johnny, who wouldn't hurt a living thing on purpose, had taken a human life.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 4 11 You might have thought it was Dally who fixed those races for Buck, being a jockey and all, but it wasn't.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 4 12 Sodapop, who had jumped into bed by this time, yelled sleepily for me to turn off the light and get to bed.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 13 The girls who were bright-eyed and had their dresses a decent length and acted as if they'd like to spit on us if given a chance.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 14 Not like the Socs, who jump greasers and wreck houses and throw beer blasts for kicks, and get editorials in the paper for being a public disgrace one day and an asset to society the next.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 15 In New York, Dally blew off steam in gang fights, but here, organized gangs are rarities--- there are just small bunches of friends who stick together, and the warfare is between the social classes.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 16 I mean, my second-oldest brother, Soda, who is sixteen-going-on-seventeen, never cracks a book at all, and my oldest brother, Darrel, who we call Darry, works too long and hard to be interested in a story or drawing a picture, so I'm not like them.
The Outsiders By S. E. HintonContext In Chapter 1 17 We walked around talking to all the greasers and hoods we knew, leaning in car windows or hopping into the back seats, and getting in on who was running away, and who was in jail, and who was going with who, and who could whip who, and who stole what and when and why.
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