1 Scarlett suspected Jonas Wilkerson, for she had frequently seen him walking down the road with Emmie at nightfall.
2 Suellen was an annoying sister with her whining and selfishness, and had it not been for Ellen's restraining hand, Scarlett would frequently have boxed her ears.
3 Scarlett had frequently used the same trick herself when discussing other girls with men, and it had never failed to convince foolish males of her sweetness and unselfishness.
4 Ellen went about with a puckered, worried forehead and Gerald swore more frequently than usual and brought her useless gifts from Jonesboro.
5 When Dr. Fontaine told Ellen gravely that heartbreak frequently led to a decline and women pined away into the grave, Ellen went white, for that fear was what she had carried in her heart.
6 Melanie and Charles, who were on excellent terms with their uncle, had frequently offered to relieve her of this ordeal, but Pitty always set her babyish mouth firmly and refused.
7 They not only admired her extravagantly, her high-spiritedness, her figure, her tiny hands and feet, her white skin, but they said so frequently, petting, hugging and kissing her to emphasize their loving words.
8 The Meades and McLures proudly read these letters all over the neighborhood, and Scarlett had frequently felt a secret shame that Melanie had no such letters from Ashley to read aloud at sewing circles.
9 Mrs. Merriwether felt that the South was heading for a complete moral collapse and frequently said so.
10 But, most of all, she kept secret the fact that Rhett Butler called frequently at Aunt Pittypat's house.
11 She knew he was listening attentively to every word and she hoped he would turn and take a hand in the conversation, as he frequently did.
12 "I'm not in a state," replied Pitty, surprisingly, for less strain than this had frequently brought on fainting fits.
13 He talked at length, laughed frequently and dominated the conversation more completely than she had ever seen him do before, but he seemed to say very little.
14 The ambulance men hurrying here and there among the prostrate forms frequently stepped on wounded men, so thickly packed were the rows, and those trodden upon stared stolidly up, waiting their turn.
15 They couldn't be more than fifteen miles from home, but at the rate this old nag traveled it would take all day, for she would have to stop frequently to rest him.