1 Tears of shame and despair choked her utterance.
2 Dolly was crushed by her sorrow, utterly swallowed up by it.
3 In his Petersburg world all people were divided into utterly opposed classes.
4 Alexey Alexandrovitch was unconsciously saying something utterly unlike what he had prepared.
5 She had never anticipated that the utterance of love would produce such a powerful effect on her.
6 She longed to give utterance to all the arguments with which she had so many times convinced herself.
7 He opened his mouth to tell her she had behaved unbecomingly, but he could not help saying something utterly different.
8 At the mention of letters the lawyer pursed up his lips, and gave utterance to a thin little compassionate and contemptuous sound.
9 The place was taken, and whenever he tried to imagine any of the girls he knew in that place, he felt that it was utterly impossible.
10 Her disbelief in his self-dissatisfaction delighted him, and unconsciously he tried to draw her into giving utterance to the grounds of her disbelief.
11 It may very well be, I repeat, that my words seem to you utterly unnecessary and out of place; it may be that they are called forth by my mistaken impression.
12 Over the ploughland riding was utterly impossible; the horse could only keep a foothold where there was ice, and in the thawing furrows he sank deep in at each step.
13 Neither of them gave full utterance to their sense of grievance, but they considered each other in the wrong, and tried on every pretext to prove this to one another.
14 They tried to tell her what the doctor had said, but it appeared that though the doctor had talked distinctly enough and at great length, it was utterly impossible to report what he had said.
15 "The people cannot help knowing; the sense of their own destinies is always in the people, and at such moments as the present that sense finds utterance," said Sergey Ivanovitch with conviction, glancing at the old bee-keeper.
16 This brother Nikolay was the elder brother of Konstantin Levin, and half-brother of Sergey Ivanovitch; a man utterly ruined, who had dissipated the greater part of his fortune, was living in the strangest and lowest company, and had quarreled with his brothers.
17 She knew, too, that he was really interested in books dealing with politics, philosophy, and theology, that art was utterly foreign to his nature; but, in spite of this, or rather, in consequence of it, Alexey Alexandrovitch never passed over anything in the world of art, but made it his duty to read everything.
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