1  Grisha and Tanya had been fighting over a ball.
2  I must get coats, you know, for Grisha and Tanya.
3  Thoughts of Tanya as a marquise, of Dolly, all had vanished.
4  Tanya behaved like a grownup person, and looked after the little ones.
5  He was not a quarter of a mile from home when he saw Grisha and Tanya running to meet him.
6  Kitty would have gone into the next room, but there the English governess was giving Tanya a lesson.
7  Here, take it, she said to Tanya, who was pulling the loosely-fitting ring off her white, slender-tipped finger.
8  The culprit was sitting at the window in the corner of the drawing room; beside him was standing Tanya with a plate.
9  As soon as he turned, at a bend in the road, and saw the party coming, Levin recognized Katavasov in a straw hat, walking along swinging his arms just as Tanya had shown him.
10  Tanya had at first been under the influence of her pity for Grisha, then of a sense of her noble action, and tears were standing in her eyes too; but she did not refuse, and ate her share.