1 It was a piece of twenty copecks.
2 And there is twenty copecks for vodka.
3 "Twenty copecks, no more, I dare say," answered Nastasya.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 4 She was Dounia over again, twenty years older, but without the projecting underlip.
5 Here are twenty roubles, I think--and if that can be of any assistance to you, then.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 6 "He has carried off my twenty copecks," Raskolnikov murmured angrily when he was left alone.
7 And all her shawls don't add more than twenty roubles a year to her hundred and twenty, I know that.
8 He was a very young man, about two and twenty, with a dark mobile face that looked older than his years.
9 But for the two roubles I lent you before, you owe me now twenty copecks on the same reckoning in advance.
10 He closed his hand on the twenty copecks, walked on for ten paces, and turned facing the Neva, looking towards the palace.
11 Exactly twenty minutes after Razumihin's departure, there came two subdued but hurried knocks at the door: he had come back.
12 Here," said Raskolnikov feeling in his pocket and finding twenty copecks, "here, call a cab and tell him to drive her to her address.
13 Looking for the seat, he had noticed a woman walking some twenty paces in front of him, but at first he took no more notice of her than of other objects that crossed his path.
14 From his dress and appearance they might well have taken him for a beggar asking alms in the streets, and the gift of the twenty copecks he doubtless owed to the blow, which made them feel sorry for him.
15 The cupola of the cathedral, which is seen at its best from the bridge about twenty paces from the chapel, glittered in the sunlight, and in the pure air every ornament on it could be clearly distinguished.
16 On the right hand, the blank unwhitewashed wall of a four-storied house stretched far into the court; on the left, a wooden hoarding ran parallel with it for twenty paces into the court, and then turned sharply to the left.
17 "Twenty to the policeman, three to Nastasya for the letter, so I must have given forty-seven or fifty to the Marmeladovs yesterday," he thought, reckoning it up for some unknown reason, but he soon forgot with what object he had taken the money out of his pocket.
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