1 If he gets out and has a breath of air.
2 "it's a pity there's no air here," he added, "it's stifling."
3 "I think so, too," Pulcheria Alexandrovna agreed with a dejected air.
4 "You'd better go out and get a breath of air," she said after a pause.
5 It was as stifling as before, but he eagerly drank in the stinking, dusty town air.
6 I'm covered with blood, Raskolnikov said with a peculiar air; then he smiled, nodded and went downstairs.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 7 Raskolnikov muttered in reply, but with such a preoccupied and inattentive air that Dounia gazed at him in perplexity.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 8 The twilight had fallen and the full moon was shining more and more brightly; but there was a peculiar breathlessness in the air.
9 He glanced with a defiant and desperate air at the porter, who without a word held out a grey folded paper sealed with bottle-wax.
10 "I am compelled to keep a business engagement, and so I shall not be in your way," he added with an air of some pique and he began getting up.
11 someone could be heard within dancing frantically, marking time with his heels to the sounds of the guitar and of a thin falsetto voice singing a jaunty air.
12 "It's nothing but misfortunes now," she added suddenly with that peculiarly sedate air which children try hard to assume when they want to speak like grown-up people.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 13 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.
14 Pyotr Petrovitch deliberately drew out a cambric handkerchief reeking of scent and blew his nose with an air of a benevolent man who felt himself slighted, and was firmly resolved to insist on an explanation.
15 Her gloves, as Razumihin noticed, were not merely shabby but had holes in them, and yet this evident poverty gave the two ladies an air of special dignity, which is always found in people who know how to wear poor clothes.
16 But he had no sooner succeeded in assuming a serious air and muttering something when he suddenly glanced again as though accidentally at Razumihin, and could no longer control himself: his stifled laughter broke out the more irresistibly the more he tried to restrain it.
17 You have to give information to the police," Porfiry replied, with a most businesslike air, "that having learnt of this incident, that is of the murder, you beg to inform the lawyer in charge of the case that such and such things belong to you, and that you desire to redeem them.
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