1 Everything about Sonia seemed to him stranger and more wonderful every moment.
2 A modern cultivated man would prefer prison to living with such strangers as our peasants.
3 There was only one stranger in the bar and a man I knew asleep on a bench and our two boys.
4 "I knew you were not asleep, but only pretending," the stranger answered oddly, laughing calmly.
5 There are chance meetings with strangers that interest us from the first moment, before a word is spoken.
6 Nastasya was standing beside him with another person, a complete stranger, who was looking at him very inquisitively.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER III 7 Raskolnikov himself lay without speaking, on his back, gazing persistently, though without understanding, at the stranger.
8 "I could not, of course, find out so much about it, for I am a stranger in Petersburg myself," Pyotr Petrovitch replied huffily.
9 muttered the stranger, frightened by the question and Raskolnikov's strange manner, and he crossed over to the other side of the street.
10 She was continually talking about them, even entering into conversation with strangers in the street, though Dounia always accompanied her.
Crime and Punishment By Fyodor DostoevskyContextHighlight In PART 6: CHAPTER VIII 11 The woman seeing a stranger stopped indifferently facing him, coming to herself for a moment and apparently wondering what he had come for.
12 Raskolnikov ran after the stranger, and at once caught sight of him walking along the other side of the street with the same even, deliberate step with his eyes fixed on the ground, as though in meditation.
13 Evidently Marmeladov was a familiar figure here, and he had most likely acquired his weakness for high-flown speeches from the habit of frequently entering into conversation with strangers of all sorts in the tavern.
14 In spite of the momentary desire he had just been feeling for company of any sort, on being actually spoken to he felt immediately his habitual irritable and uneasy aversion for any stranger who approached or attempted to approach him.
15 I at once fixed on my plan, sat down by the mother, and began by saying that I too was a stranger and that people here were ill-bred and that they couldn't distinguish decent folks and treat them with respect, gave her to understand that I had plenty of money, offered to take them home in my carriage.