| I don't see why it ain't art when you can steal a shoat better than anybody else can. |
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| Didn't I say that the old Manassas Gap ain't half so black as she's painted? |
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| I ain't tried them for quite a while, and maybe they'll help the heartburn. |
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| What a pity it is that we ain't in a climate where one can fasten the windows, and Boult the shutters! |
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| But it ain't nare preachin' of sist' Humphreys done give me a brokin an' a contrary hairt. |
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| Slade an' skelly ain't soldiers that come out an' fight fa'r an' squar' in the open. |
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| Muslin and soft goods everywhere and nine chances to one there ain't a gun in the house. |
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| I don't reckon to come till nine on a Sunday morning, and I start with the washing-up, and none of the rooms ain't done. |
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| It ain't that play set him crazy to make Bell River with an outfit to lick a bunch of scallawag neches. |
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| She washed a Monday, and she ain't taken her clothes in yet, and it's Thursday. |
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| And then it was boo-hoo, you know, same as women will when a thing ain't jest according to their liking. |
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| The two of 'em ain't done nothin' but argue and row over diseases and imagination and medicines ever since Sophi got here. |
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| If I ain't scart to have you here, I don't see why you should be scart to stay. |
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| Yer whar Brer B'ar bin squattin' on he hunkers, en dar de print w'ich he ain't got no tail. |
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| Their sickness was the hand of God, but benny just ain't had enough to eat. |
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| Mrs. Stiver is busy with an obstetrical case, and that town nurse of yours is off on vacation, ain't she? |
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| Plenty o' gentlemen, when they see a bit o' cloam that ain't quite the same as ordinary cloam, will tell ye it's worth money. |
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| No Mam, I ain't never been in no jailhouse in all my days, and I sho ain't aimin' to de nothin' to make 'em put me dar now. |
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| Well, up in a balloon there ain't any of that, and it's the darlingest place there is. |
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| Now the hull offis is mad at me, 'cos I ain't a walk-in' cyclopeeda of typograffickal turm. |
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| It ain't quite our up-to-date kibosh, o' course, but the way as that Sam chewed the rag was just jammy. |
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| This time they ain't none of them screwy Venusians to put the whammy on him, and he's doing okay. |
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| The scripters, now,' sez I, 'doos say that arter death there ain't neither merryin' nor givin' in merrige. |
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| There ain't no piousness stickin' out on him fer folks to hang their hat on, neither. |
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| It won't hurt your old cart to go out in the stumps, but we ain't going to drive in the ditch, not by a jugful. |
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| I know we passed somethin' then, though just what I ain't competent to testify. |
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| There ain't no man on the shores of this here lake that can pull a net with a steady hand like orn Skinner. |
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| I've been grub-stakin' Jacks for two or three years, and he ain't never yet found anythin' but country rock. |
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| An', my bredren, includin' uv de sistren, I ain't gwine ter spare yer feelin's dis day. |
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| It's a perlite thing to fling the key in upon us after this fashion, ain't it? |
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| You ain't been to see her for almost a week, and she'll be gettin' peeved at you. |
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| I ain't hired him to loaf 'round all day with Ruby and to sulk when she's gone. |
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| If it ain't a doggish sort of bisnes I'm mistaken in my idees of the proprietes of life. |
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| I ain't handsome, none never accused me of that crime, but I ain't lopsided an' lantern-jawed t' the extent she went. |
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| I ain't no telepathist, hon. You never yeeped one little word since I left. |
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| I couldn't believe it, because I know Colonel clines ain't going to block himself up in a cage. |
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| I ain't sayin' the spirit of grace is actually th'owed me, but I feel prone to say I thinks it's fixin' to rassle wid me. |
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| And now you try to pull your high-and-mighty airs on me, just because Charlie and I are in love and ain't married yet. |
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| I've taken all comers 'twixt hoorah and Hackenny, and he ain't let me down yet. |
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| And maybe she ain't some picture, too, as she jumps in behind the wheel of the truck and steps on the gas pedal! |
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| Why, kier, seems to me you ain't very perlite to leave the table afore anybody else does. |
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| I know enough anyway to know when Pa ain't going to be no mark for a buncher questions, but it's got me going. |
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| I guess pretty much everybody's a beardy Man nowadays, if he ain't a Dunkard! |
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| Dey weigh like Sam Hill, an' sixty bushel at dat allowance ain't goin' to last t'ree weeks here. |
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| I know every rope on a merchantman, kin name 'em from fore royal stay to topping lift, but that ain't the hundredth part on it. |
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| There ain't a dipper left in the ship, and the water pourin' in by the barrelful! |
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| I bought you, an' paid my money fer you, an' I ain't a gwine ter let you SASE me in dat way. |
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| She's needed here and ain't got no call to gallivant off to New York and beyont with a strange man, beauty or no beauty. |
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| I hope you ain't lettin' that long-tongued Brown woman bother your head, are you? |
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| Why, I ain't bin inside a schoolhouse since I was knee-high to a grasshopper. |
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| Den, how come you talk so uppity, like a man wid de law on he side and ain't a-scared o' nobody? |
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| As bad as it is on a freighter, I reckon you ain't sorry you're off that yacht, son? |
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| Well, maybe he's hot, and talks like the proprietor, and forgets that an engagement ain't always a lead-pipe cinch. |
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| I ain't such a four-flusher as to lay down my hand before I've played it out. |
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| The woman I worked for was one of those sort of no-good women who ain't bad or who ain't good, who is just nothing. |
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| I always runned out and tried to see 'em, but old as I is, nigh 86, I ain't never seed no scritch owl. |
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| Ef I ain't done come traipsin' off en lef' my ole man money-pus, en he got sump'n' in dar w'at he won't take a purty fer, needer! |
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| And it's surprising ain't it, what a lot of information you can sop up when you do the sponge act in earnest? |
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| Any woman what'd leave a po' li'l mite lak dat to perish to death ain't fitten t' be no dotter o' mine. |
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| I ain't saying as I expect any such thing will happen, on board the paramatta. |
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| You ain't been to court much, I presume likely, Perfessor, so you may not be on to what alibi is. |
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| She 'lows he's got some scheme or other, 'at ain't no good to your folks, a-lettin' good money on a wore-out farm like Skyrie. |
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| Down with the yellowbelly, and teach him that this country ain't no place fer him nor his kind. |
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| We ain't as mealy-mouthed and as p'lite and as smooth-tongued as the moderns. |
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| I ain't not a pertickler good speller myself, but I reely shoud be artily ashamed of sich a blunder as that. |
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| So there wuz, and I'll be eternally gol durned if he ain't a-suin' the estate in the probate court now f'r the price uv it! |
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| But there ain't no reason why winter should be worse on the O-hio than on the Yadkin. |
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| Nelson Smith had no business to say, 'This island ain't just right,' for it was a righter place than ever I seen elsewhere. |
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| Even if you had the brains, you ain't got the taste nor the sperrit in you. |
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| They ain't like yours, but it won't do fer you to go dressed like a millionairess. |
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| Macquarie was a spieler, and any man that ud be his mate ain't much better. |
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| I seen de fulfilment o' promise, an' my heart was bustin' full, but I ain't got no halleluiah tongue like you. |
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| It does sound so pesky ridic'lous, although it ain't, when you understand it. |
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| You're tellin' him this road agent's a friend o' mine, because I called for a registered letter for him once, ain't you? |
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| I ain't sure of the word, but I believe that means thin-blooded or underfed. |
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| I think things ain't right when a malpais girl helps a hawss thief and a rustler to escape twice. |
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| Why, I ain't got but two pairs of stockings, an' misc Somers is a wearin' one of' em, and the ould pair's in the wash. |
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| The Frenches ain't had no practice, an' thar's nothin' easier than a misdeal about a youngone. |
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| Ever' time he misplace somp'n, he feel in his pocket to see ef it ain't thaiuh. |
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| I've been awake for seven days, Brent, an' I ain't a girl no moh in some ways. |
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| I've been in the foc'sle and there ain't so much as a photo nor a picture-postcard nailed up. |
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| Well, folks that have stirred around a good bit tell me that there ain't a purtier place on the earth. |
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| I have a sort of forewarning that I ain't agoing to walk straight into this thing. |
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| It's a nice sounding word in connection with one of your own that you've rared strict, ain't it? |
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| I'm goin' to show him my babies, especially rastus, and I know he ain't hard. |
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| There ain't goin' to be no hittin' after the clinch, and if there's any fouls, you leave it to me. |
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| They ain't no bloodhound on your track, but a ugly octopus of a devilfish is gittin' its arms out after you. |
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| Zero is the bottom of the spondulix scale fer me, although the thummometer seems to prove it ain't necessarily thus. |
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| I'm forty-two and not so much of a fool that I ain't a little bit of a physician. |
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| I ain't afraid of many things, but I 'm darned extensive if I 'd not be afeard of her! |
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| Some troubles ain't no more 'n a dull pain, an' some are like cuts an' gashes. |
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| De mammies ain't even 'member which wuz dere chilluns half de time, so dar wuz no mo'Nin' when somebody got sold. |
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| It ain't any trouble, because it's the first land you'll strike the other side of the Atlantic. |
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| No, I ain't never had my pictur' took since I was a young girl and had it on a tintype. |
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| It ain't likely no one in Kilo would buy a fire-extinguisher like them, all nickel-plated, if they had their senses about 'em. |
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| Had to wrastle Pedro away from the stove an' I ain't quite on to that oven yet, but they look good, don't they? |
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| Well, there ain't much use 'whooping up the boys' when only the whooper gets wild. |
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| Ain't I cooked fo' yo', and ain't I followed you everywheres since I quit ridin' yo' pa's bosses to vict'ry? |
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| That makes us pirates, and that old Maggie burgee floatin' at the fore ain't nothin' more nor less than the Jolly Roger. |
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| I ain't so much of a wreck yet but that I can navigate Boston without a pilot. |
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| I am peaceable, and don't get up rows with people that ain't doing nothing to me. |
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| You ain't folks that'll build fires in our woodlot an' leave 'em careless like. |
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| They do look kinder like a set of hames that ain't been treated kindly, don't they? |
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| I ain't more 'n half a man when she's round, she makes me feel so sheepish. |
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| With them gals to hender us we ain't a-going to be in no fettle for a skimper-scamper race with a fresh wheen o' the redskins. |
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| Since you've spoke repentful, an' confessed, I ain't agoin' to worrit ye about it. |
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| He 's up an' gone, ain't 'e, an' we might as well begin t' look out fer ol' number one. |
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| He did give us the house, but it ain't for you to twit me of that. |
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| The young 'uns is mostly ginger, and them that ain't is mousey. |
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| And his head ain't all mush and seeds like a pumpkin, if I'm any judge. |
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| And I must say Quimby ain't been none too newsy on the subject. |
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| He's got bone enough for a waggon, but a waggon ain't a Hansom. |
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| A cousin of mine's a wagon master and he ain't going ter give up easy. |
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| And I hear he's made them pay twenty dollars for his old cookstove that ain't worth ten. |
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| You ain't so wery 'andsome that you can afford to throw avay many o' your good looks. |
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| They ain't finished as they ort to be, and I would not wear 'em. |
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| What cause she got to worrit about ile whin she ain't got ache or pain? |
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| I ain't goin' to wrastle with no ca on this here trip, none whatever. |
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| No, I swan if it ain't a yearling as has been pulled down now. |
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| But ain't you afraid that dog o' yourn'll bark himself to death? |
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| Mis' Pegrum's house ain't but a stone's throw from yourn, is it? |
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| If youse ain't learnt your lesson yet, youse might as well go back. |
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| I done heah, Massa Tom, dat yo' all's gwine off on a long trip once mo'.Does yo' mean dat yo' all ain't gwine to take me, Massa Tom? |
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| I ain't a baby, nor a perambulator neither, to be pushed about by you. |
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| I ain't partic'lar as a rule, and I don't take no blame for settling his hash, but I don't reckon him ornamental now, do you? |
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| But there ain't no crawlin' out o' pitchstone Canyon, they say. |
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| And there's twenty thousand Boers plunk in the middle, ain't they? |
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| He shaved me without a pull, and my face ain't no plush sofy, neither. |
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| If it goes on much longer I'll be potty if I ain't a gone 'un. |
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| There ain't any thieves hereabouts, and if there was, I guess they wouldn't make for your sunshade, but come along. |
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| He ain't git fur 'fo' he see Brer Fox comin' down de road all primp up. |
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| An' what's the greatest ingrejunce in punkin pies if it ain't eggs? |
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| So you think there ain't going to be any rake-off on the wanagan? |
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| I keep at my man to build a new kitchen, but he ain't one of your hustlers. |
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| I want a resting place somewhar, 'cause I ain't got none here. |
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| When it ain't that, it calls itself the rest room, you know. |
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| It ain't what I implicate, it's what Gaffer implicated,' was the dogged and determined answer. |
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| Jane Ann's man ain't such a bad sort, nuther, though he's so contrary that he wears his fur coat when the thermometer's at ninety. |
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| It ain't a grab at a man's whisker, not yet a shake or two of a man, that 'ud put a man off from getting a little child out of punishment. |
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| I'm glad you chose them, because we ain't got nothink else in the 'Ouse. |
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| He ain't liked the way things 'a' been goin' since he got outa jail. |
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| I've told you this Engle melon ain't as ripe as they think it is. |
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| Now, I leave it to you if a wild goose ain't too smart to go in a trap. |
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| It'll be sure to be in a country where we ain't got no extradition treaty. |
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| They ain't got no fitten respec' fur dere elders and dat's a fac', boss. |
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| Then where is this hopped-up layout anyway, fellah, if it ain't on Earth? |
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| If there ain't no such thing, sor, 'ow do we know w'ot it can do? |
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| Oh, miss, ain't it a mercy everybody ain't so like your own! |
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| But I tell you plain and simple, the best of you ain't knee-high fit to tie Daylight's moccasin strings. |
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| That ain't her usual way with kenelm by a consider'ble sight. |
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| It ain't made of wax nor anything else that folks ever made. |
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| We ain't either of us had much call to hanker after the dark meat. |
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| He was a darned blackguard and his name ain't mentioned in this house. |
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| You rec'lect that there ain't a roof on that side o' the house. |
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| As you ain't davenport, why, of course, you ain't entitled to it. |
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| These is fam'ly affairs, Lucy, and they ain't for public ears. |
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| We're goin' up to copperas Creek and there ain't a thing in that. |
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| She's costed me a deal already, but she ain't got all the money. |
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| Pharaoh's multitude that were drowned in the Red Sea, ain't more beyond restoring to life. |
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| I ain't seen her sens I left Mizzouri, goin' on five years ago. |
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| There ain't no quieter place in Pennsylvany than Radville, Mr. Duncan. |
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| I ain't a spy, 'Liz'beth Berry, and I ain't paid by no livin' soul. |
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| God knows I ain't discountin' the comfort I've always took in him. |
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| Something that ain't human's talking at me on a communicator! |
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| I ain't fit to run this shebang, so we need you, and need you bad. |
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| Dis heah chile ain't a gwine ter stay in no house wid a hant. |
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| I'd just as soon tell you who I am, though, if you'll swear to keep mum, for I ain't no Phillips, either. |
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| It's at the sixty-second chapter now, and the wedding ain't any nearer than when it begun, far's I can see. |
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| I ain't held it all these years to let it go now fer a duffer like him. |
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| They be dum good blokes, to give their money to a squatter, ain't they? |
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| Oh, pshaw, toady, I tell you there ain't such a thing as a ghost! |
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| I want him to think he ain't got a friend on earth but himself. |
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| You'll be a deadhead yourself if you ain't careful, young feller! |
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| They ain't any bigger in this country than Old Toombs's barns. |
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| I guess I ain't told you much you don't know about your snide business. |
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| So 't you ain't goin' to say it's all holler an' empty, this world. |
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| I always eat 'em, and then there ain't any room for homesickness! |
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| Leastways, if such was your intention as to enter and careen, and there ain't no better place for that in these waters. |
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| There ain't nothing TO sailoring, when you come to look it in the face. |
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| I sayed to myse'f, 'Dis ain't no way fo' you to do,' an' den I goes back. |
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| That's Joe's own scrawl, and there ain't a worse from this to himself. |
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| I ain't read the scripters in relations to dat young lady faw nuthin! |
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| It ain't a selfish feeling, so I know there's some good in it. |
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| I know I ain't been the helpmeet you expected me to be, Jase Day. |
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| There's them as runs down Teddy Phillips and says he ain't much of a teacher, but I guess he's all right. |
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| They look aloofly down at you, superior sneers telling you no, chum, this ain't for you. |
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| I ain't much to spend, and mebbe that sounds some like sour grapes. |
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| Blessed if this ain't gettin' more excitin' than the South Seas. |
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| If he puts all he's got on now, when it ain't lower than twenty above, what'll he do later on when it goes down to fifty and sixty below? |
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| You ain't been swallowed up in no blizzard, be you, comin' into town? |
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| It ain't you that's taking my spondulix in, you big, overgrown Swede! |
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| It nearly took me bre'th away t'inkin' uv it, an' I ain't got over it yet. |
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| I'm afraid there ain't much call for temple hands in this burg. |
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| I ain't sartin there ain't some redskins 'tween hyer and the clearing. |
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| The 'fraction' ain't 'ignited' yet and the doctors are worried. |
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| But somehow I ain't so chesty about havin' dug up a relation. |
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| I ain't up to towny ways nohow, and I allow that mebbe I'm rather green. |
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| What good can it do you to throw cold water on that corpse and get up that selfish theory that there ain't been any murder? |
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| Strange what names folks 'll christen onto children, ain't it? |
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| This ain't the time and the place for rehashing, that's all. |
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| I ain't never peeped into a jailhouse or had handcuffs on these hands. |
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| Pity you ain't ridin' some 'em races Johnson's jock tosses off. |
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| There ain't a carpenter that don't rebate his wages Saturday night to the contractor. |
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| I is all broke down and en wore out now, en so I reckon it ain't in me to storm aroun' no mo', like I used to when I 'uz trompled on en 'bused. |
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