1 They had expected something quite different.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 2 I have often talked to him of you at different times.
3 Yet that is the case, with some types especially, for men are so different.
4 Here was a deserted fenced-off place where rubbish of different sorts was lying.
5 And I am out of sorts altogether, he began in quite a different tone, laughing to Razumihin.
6 Lizaveta was younger than the old woman and was her half-sister, being the child of a different mother.
7 Rather clumsy, that is to say, he is a man of polished manners, but I mean clumsy in a different sense.
8 Pride and self-confidence grew continually stronger in him; he was becoming a different man every moment.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER VII 9 Though he was almost falling from fatigue, he went a long way round so as to get home from quite a different direction.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 10 "A capital thing, a capital thing," repeated Porfiry Petrovitch, as though he had just thought of something quite different.
11 It was a different matter when he met with acquaintances or with former fellow students, whom, indeed, he disliked meeting at any time.
12 Of course, it was all ordinary youthful talk and thought, such as he had often heard before in different forms and on different themes.
13 He put them all in the different pockets of his overcoat, and the remaining pocket of his trousers, trying to conceal them as much as possible.
14 He had seen her yesterday for the first time, but at such a moment, in such surroundings and in such a dress, that his memory retained a very different image of her.
15 But Raskolnikov, who had expected something quite different, gazed blankly and dreamily at him, making no reply, as though he heard the name of Pyotr Petrovitch for the first time.
16 Dark agonising ideas rose in his mind--the idea that he was mad and that at that moment he was incapable of reasoning, of protecting himself, that he ought perhaps to be doing something utterly different from what he was now doing.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 1: CHAPTER VII 17 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.
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