ART in Classic Quotes

Simple words can express big ideas - learn how great writers to make beautiful sentences with common words.
Quotes from Gone With The Wind by Margaret Mitche
Free Online Vocabulary Test
K12, SAT, GRE, IELTS, TOEFL
 Search Panel
Word:
You may input your word or phrase.
Author:
Book:
 
Stems:
If search object is a contraction or phrase, it'll be ignored.
Sort by:
Each search starts from the first page. Its result is limited to the first 17 sentences. If you upgrade to a VIP account, you will see up to 500 sentences for one search.
Common Search Words
 Current Search - art in Gone With The Wind
1  To which Rhett replied: "Consistency, thou art a jewel," and shrugged.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XLIX
2  It was bad enough that she had tried by every art to take Ashley from her.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER LXI
3  There was a glamor to it, a perfection and a completeness and a symmetry to it like Grecian art.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXXI
4  She told herself that the child was merely full of life and there was still time in which to teach her the arts and graces of being attractive to men.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III
5  No one could be more dominating than stout Mrs. Merriwether, more imperious than frail Mrs. Elsing, more artful in securing her own ends than the silver-haired sweet-voiced Mrs. Whiting.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER XXXVI
6  The valet, Pork by name, shining black, dignified and trained in all the arts of sartorial elegance, was the result of an all-night poker game with a planter from St. Simons Island, whose courage in a bluff equaled Gerald's but whose head for New Orleans rum did not.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER III
7  And when Scarlett discovered him jumping fences after his solemn promise to his wife, or learned the exact amount of his losses at poker, as she always did from County gossip, she refrained from mentioning the fact at the supper table in the artfully artless manner Suellen had.
Gone With The Wind By Margaret Mitche
ContextHighlight   In CHAPTER II