1 I cannot spare her, and I am sure she does not want to go.
2 Your mother is quite anxious about it, but cannot very well spare time to sit down herself, because of her fringe.
3 I think nobody can justly accuse me of sparing myself upon any occasion, but really I cannot do everything at once.
4 Dr. Grant, professing an indisposition, for which he had little credit with his fair sister-in-law, could not spare his wife.
5 She must be the doer of everything: Lady Bertram would of course be spared all thought and exertion, and it would all fall upon her.
6 The spare rooms at the Parsonage had never been wanted, but the absolute necessity of a spare room for a friend was now never forgotten.
7 I could very ill spare the time, and you might have saved me the trouble, if you would only have been so good as to let us know you were going out.
8 I am not one of those that spare their own trouble; and Nanny shall fetch her, however it may put me to inconvenience to have my chief counsellor away for three days.
9 So ended their discourse, which, for any very appropriate service it could render Fanny, might as well have been spared, for Mrs. Norris had not the smallest intention of taking her.
10 Edmund was fond of speaking to her of Miss Crawford, but he seemed to think it enough that the Admiral had since been spared; and she scrupled to point out her own remarks to him, lest it should appear like ill-nature.
11 I shall get the dairymaid to set them under the first spare hen, and if they come to good I can have them moved to my own house and borrow a coop; and it will be a great delight to me in my lonely hours to attend to them.
12 Not all her precautions, however, could save her from being suspected of something better; or, perhaps, her very display of the importance of a spare room might have misled Sir Thomas to suppose it really intended for Fanny.
13 To prevent its being expected, she had fixed on the smallest habitation which could rank as genteel among the buildings of Mansfield parish, the White House being only just large enough to receive herself and her servants, and allow a spare room for a friend, of which she made a very particular point.
14 Mrs. Norris had now so ingeniously done away all Mrs. Grant's part of the favour, that Fanny, who found herself expected to speak, could only say that she was very much obliged to her aunt Bertram for sparing her, and that she was endeavouring to put her aunt's evening work in such a state as to prevent her being missed.