1 She always wore battered goatskin shoes, and was clean in her person.
2 His linen was always decent; in that respect he was especially clean.
3 However, the two rooms are exceedingly clean, and as it is for so short a time.
4 He was a man of about five and thirty, short, stout even to corpulence, and clean shaven.
5 Porfiry Petrovitch was wearing a dressing-gown, very clean linen, and trodden-down slippers.
6 Everything was very clean; the floor and the furniture were brightly polished; everything shone.
7 Against the other wall stood a big bed, very clean and covered with a silk patchwork wadded quilt.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 8 I admit it openly--for one may as well make a clean breast of it--I was the first to pitch on you.
9 There were actually real pillows under his head now, down pillows in clean cases, he observed that, too, and took note of it.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 10 She began to prepare for his coming, began to do up her room for him, to clean the furniture, to wash and put up new hangings and so on.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 11 And it was so cool, it was wonderful, wonderful, blue, cold water running among the parti-coloured stones and over the clean sand which glistened here and there like gold.
12 When they were clean, he took out the axe, washed the blade and spent a long time, about three minutes, washing the wood where there were spots of blood rubbing them with soap.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 13 We will make a clean sweep of all these psychological points, of a suspicion against you, so that your crime will appear to have been something like an aberration, for in truth it was an aberration.
14 Often he went to sleep on it, as he was, without undressing, without sheets, wrapped in his old student's overcoat, with his head on one little pillow, under which he heaped up all the linen he had, clean and dirty, by way of a bolster.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER III 15 Putting the iron which was a little the smaller on the piece of wood, he fastened them very firmly, crossing and re-crossing the thread round them; then wrapped them carefully and daintily in clean white paper and tied up the parcel so that it would be very difficult to untie it.
16 none at all, but she got herself up as though she were going on a visit; and not that she'd anything to do it with, she smartened herself up with nothing at all, she'd done her hair nicely, put on a clean collar of some sort, cuffs, and there she was, quite a different person, she was younger and better looking.
17 Even the table-cloth was nearly clean; the crockery, knives, forks and glasses were, of course, of all shapes and patterns, lent by different lodgers, but the table was properly laid at the time fixed, and Amalia Ivanovna, feeling she had done her work well, had put on a black silk dress and a cap with new mourning ribbons and met the returning party with some pride.
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