1 Zossimov forced himself to laugh.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 3: CHAPTER III 2 Perhaps you will laugh at my saying so.
3 Really, don't laugh at my describing him so.
4 One sudden irrelevant idea almost made him laugh.
5 Raskolnikov gave a laugh, but rather a forced one.
6 He listened with pleasure, so that he longed to laugh and laugh.
7 Don't laugh at it, there's an idea in suffering, Nikolay is right.
8 Why, they would laugh at me, and would call me a fool for not getting it.
9 "Oh, don't trouble, please," cried Raskolnikov and he suddenly broke into a laugh.
10 if only you knew what you are asking, he added, and gave a sudden, loud, short laugh.
11 Here her laugh turned again to an insufferable fit of coughing that lasted five minutes.
12 We shall have a laugh at them afterwards, and if I were in your place I'd mystify them more than ever.
13 There was something infinitely hideous and shocking in that laugh, in those eyes, in such nastiness in the face of a child.
14 Yes, he remembered that he began laughing a thin, nervous noiseless laugh, and went on laughing all the time he was crossing the square.
15 Raskolnikov's set and earnest face was suddenly transformed, and he suddenly went off into the same nervous laugh as before, as though utterly unable to restrain himself.
16 The wrinkles on his forehead were smoothed out, his eyes contracted, his features broadened and he suddenly went off into a nervous prolonged laugh, shaking all over and looking Raskolnikov straight in the face.
17 The latter forced himself to laugh, too, but when Porfiry, seeing that he was laughing, broke into such a guffaw that he turned almost crimson, Raskolnikov's repulsion overcame all precaution; he left off laughing, scowled and stared with hatred at Porfiry, keeping his eyes fixed on him while his intentionally prolonged laughter lasted.
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