Wolfe offers an updated understanding of fraternities as social lockboxes far removed from their bawdy Animal House progenitors. |
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I imagine they have made some bawdy bravado remark about wanting to see someone's helmet, and have met their match. |
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What we've already got, courtesy of executive producer Jeffrey Lane, is a bawdy night of shticks and bones. |
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And this was the case with printed miscellanies, where bawdy verse was a favorite. |
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Her grandmother, Madame Duval from Paris, shows up and is a marvel of bawdy vulgarity. |
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Later on he successfully puzzled over the riddles of some bawdy conundrums. |
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He also loved bawdy songs and ancient poetry bordering on the pornographic. |
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Part soap, part farce, the series is undeniably slight, a feelgood bubble of bawdy froth. |
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The act got a big laugh at the annual event, and the bawdy tone spread throughout the evening as honorees and presenters told naughty jokes. |
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The first story admits of a little frivolity, as we see in the conversation of the girls and the bawdy chat of Graham. |
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Brothers and sisters should avoid one another in public and refrain from telling bawdy jokes or making sexual remarks in each other's presence. |
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Their bawdy exploits were commented on by Howerd during asides, complete with awful puns, in a pastiche of the traditional Greek chorus. |
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From time-to-time, an unevenness in tone is evident, as the movie swerves between bawdy farce and melodrama. |
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The bawdy humour came straight out of the music hall and it's a British tradition that led on to the Carry On films, Benny Hill and Les Dawson. |
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The book fails to portray the bawdy and contentious woman who wanted always to be on center stage. |
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Several mainstream game publishers are releasing bawdy games containing nudity and explicit sexual content. |
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A mixture of passion, nostalgia, and masculine bawdy infuses the cult of youthful athleticism. |
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Comedy, tragedy, love, death, the spiritual and the bawdy are all represented. |
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We looked on the hopheads, crooks and gunsels and on their bawdy ladies as members of a family among whom we were privileged to move. |
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Our curiosity was aroused by the gleeful squeals and ripples of bawdy laughter emanating from the crowd. |
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In fact, they seem determined to recreate the bawdy, bumptious atmosphere of a redneck boozer. |
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If he really doesn't want to receive bawdy come-ons, he has ways of stopping it that he should have exercised a LOOOOOOONG time ago. |
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Benjamin, who appreciated bawdy humor as much as any of his kindred, would have relished the vitality of the street scene. |
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Literary references to wine drinking are legion, presumably because it encouraged conversation, civilized, bawdy, or sometimes nonsensical. |
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Traveling minstrels serenaded their clients with bawdy or heroic tales set to music. |
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With its sizzling mixture of accordions, fiddles and gin-soaked vocals it could be both bawdy and soulful. |
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Someone had turned on the jukebox and a bawdy drinking song filled the air. |
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And I get to play his once live-in lover and assistant, who's a very ballsy, bawdy Parisian. |
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During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Southwark was London's bawdy pleasure district. |
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Catcalls and lewd hooting spilled forth from the mouths of Chris' bawdy band mates. |
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The uproarious, bawdy image of these parties is wholly at odds with the petite, soft-spoken 41-year-old divorcee who has masterminded it all. |
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For all its bawdy variety, however, Picasso's sexual imagination remains remarkably conventional. |
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Herodas was a Greek poet who wrote realistic but bawdy mimes in choliambic verse. |
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There is plenty of Shakespeare's bawdy humour too and the sexual innuendoes come thick and fast. |
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The young women were charged with being inmates in a common bawdy house while the gents were charged as found-ins. |
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The District of Columbia, of course, was a garrison town and a transit point, with a plethora of saloons and bawdy houses to attract soldiers. |
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But even the reviewer can find mirth and consolation, in a bawdy Britcom, or a backyard fight between a raccoon and a cat. |
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Take Lucette, who suffers bawdy assaults from practical joker gnomes or Odette, who does a typing performance without a safety net! |
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They are inveterate gamblers, drink as much beer as their wages will permit, are devoted to bawdy jokes, and use probably the foulest language in the world. |
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Its impressive, often striking visual design and broad, bawdy humour could best be described as an offbeat combination of Tim Burton, Terry Gilliam and Wayne and Shuster. |
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That's the kind of bawdy quick-wittedness that has rescued Mr. Norton in the past. |
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She had attempted to set up a drop-in centre, and she was later charged under the bawdy house laws. |
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Lucien wanted him to know Monsieur et Madame Papinien, proprietors of the maison particuliere, or the town's bawdy house. |
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What began as light trash talk became bawdy comedy as the show progressed. |
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Mozart might not have been the spendthrift hellion portrayed in the 1984 film Amadeus, but he could play the piano blindfolded, loved wooing women and wrote bawdy letters. |
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Our great-grandfathers would rather have been seen in a bawdy house than in a bank. |
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The harm caused by that application of the bawdy house law is unacceptable in an advanced, free, and democratic society. |
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To your knowledge, are the bawdy house provisions used to prohibit people from going to these places? |
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More than bawdy, though, The Ball adds a familiar unpretentiousness to trendy locales like Tao, Lavo, The Park, and Dream Hotel. |
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Note the bawdy pun in the first example, by which the speaker implies that she came last night. |
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The bawdy jokes that followed may have helped a politician who looks like he was born in a suit. |
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But the book is also at times funny, bawdy, and optimistic, as is Lloyd herself. |
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When is a bawdy, ribald tale of a wanton wench and her very naughty sexual adventures as boring as a trip to the Field Museum to watch dinosaur bones fossilize? |
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We've heard concerns over the bawdy house laws, that some felt there's too much of a police presence on the bawdy house laws. |
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Greasy-looking drunkards occupied just about every bench and chair space, laughing rowdily while telling lurid jokes and singing bawdy sea chanteys. |
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The justice system has started to re-examine the application of the bawdy house laws to gay bathhouses. |
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In the adopted city of the bawdy pun master Pietro Aretino, one of Sansovino's close friends, such ribaldry, even in so august a location, should come as no surprise. |
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In Shakespeare's day, his plays were considered riotous and bawdy. |
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You didn't tell us the joke-and just for the record, we're not asking-but let's take a flyer and assume it was sexist, bigoted, bawdy, scatological or all of the above. |
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There he was, mopping the deck after that freak storm that had just hit, whistling a bawdy melody that he'd heard in a barroom once, when he spotted her. |
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Silverman's big break came with a cameo in 2005's The Aristocrats, when she told a jarringly bawdy version of the famous joke. |
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Interspersing songs with humorous anecdotes in which his bawdy humor and racy wit come into play, audiences never know what's going to happen when Kan Kan takes to the stage. |
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If little has changed regarding governmental disapproval of bad language and bawdy behavior on TV and radio, things certainly are different for Penn these days. |
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As result of your reading did you form an opinion regarding the sincerity of the writer in an attempt to express an honest picture as opposed to mere bawdy? |
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His wonderful wit greatly delighted contemporary readers, most of whom were not worried by bawdy, though there were some who thought it inappropriate for a clergyman. |
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The men who watch her performance back at the bawdy house also fall into a state of paralytic rapture. |
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But script and company are trying to function in two registers simultaneously, and the show vacillates too wildly from child-focused hamming to bawdy double entendre. |
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The bawdy house would have a licence stipulating some very specific conditions. |
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Inappropriate skills include lewdness, obscene words or gestures, inappropriately approaching others, bawdy behaviours, and tantrums. |
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In a cruel twist of irony, the criminal prohibition on bawdy houses may produce the very nuisances that the soliciting law is trying to prevent. |
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Never one to mince her words, Leakes is as bawdy as they get on reality television. |
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In the early 1970s there were from 800 to 1200 bawdy house charges a year Canadawide as compared to about 200 a year now. |
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The novel sets out to over-write the bawdy, lusty Chaucerian England of popular mythology with a landscape that is sinister, threatening, and politically unstable. |
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Her special gifts, however, happened to be of a rather bawdy sort, and she was also a bit of a brawler. |
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Filmmakers started using bawdy humor, urban settings, tight hand-to-hand combat shots and the rough Cantonese of the streets. |
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Every now and again, some insightful show biz honcho would hear that bawdy horse laugh and recognize her true versatility, however. |
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The only singer, Carol Woods, steered a careful middle course between restraint and bawdy lubricity. |
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But his humour most certainly isn't dimmed, with some boisterously bawdy versions of the 14th-century Welsh poet Dafydd ap Gwilym. |
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Of particular concern to the press is the bawdy house law, which interestingly has been applied to both places of prostitution and gay bathhouses. |
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It was not considered honourable for officers to frequent bawdy houses. |
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Since the early 1970s Canadian police have paid progressively less and less attention to bawdy house violations and off-street prostitution in general. |
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But bawdy houses I think are actually a very workable solution. |
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Beaumarchais shocked and scandalized theatre-goers of the 18th century with his trilogy of bawdy plays centering on the rascally jack-of-all-trades, Figaro. |
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You want to see the bawdy house law struck down. |
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The third thing the government is doing with the bill is allowing the use of wiretapping to solve the crime of living off the avails of child prostitution, keeping a common bawdy house and using underaged prostitutes. |
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Like most folk literature, landai can be sorrowful or bawdy. |
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They were the often bawdy Latin songs of itinerant theological students who roamed rather disreputably from school to school in the period preceding the founding of the great university centres in the 13th century. |
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The play cleverly foreshadowed the class conflicts of the coming French revolution, its rollicking bawdy humour skewering aristocrats, lawyers, pedants, servants, and prudes alike. |
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Now, he is surrounded by strobing lights and throbbing keyboards, the keening slide guitars of David Vandervelde and some bawdy band crescendos lit up in the purple of a roadside cathouse. |
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To me, that's an approach, and I just wonder if looking at that in terms of the bawdy house rules and trying to relax them resonates with other people at the table. |
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Mr. Réal Ménard: Would you agree to a bawdy house system that would be licensed by the Solicitor General, a system where bawdy houses could not be established in residential sectors? |
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The other question that I want to ask you is about the bawdy house law. |
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There are bawdy house charges in the case of a gay bathhouse in Hamilton, Ontario, and the spectre of those environments being policed and prosecutions being made is one that for our community is unacceptable. |
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This issue of bawdy house legislation is a rather interesting one because right now any street worker can go inside and perform that activity inside. |
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Should we decide to permit bawdy houses, then there must be regulations that would allow neighbourhoods to decide whether or not their presence is acceptable in their community. |
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They were cheerful enough, liked a bit of chiacking, and the women enjoyed the bawdy undertones of their jokes. |
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I would like you to give some thought to the idea of establishing a public licensed bawdy house system whereby these establishments could not set up in residential sectors. |
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Mrs. Suzanne Jay: We don't have an official position on bawdy houses, but we have I think a crude agreement among our collective that we disagree with red light districts. |
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Since the committee has gone beyond all that and has gone into the whole issue of bawdy houses, should all the bawdy house laws, living off the avails, and other laws be stricken from the books? |
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I think bawdy houses fall under that description. |
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As long as you're keeping things at a distance and as long as you're having consultations with the community, things such as bawdy houses should be workable. |
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Words may be witty and even at times bawdy. |
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I would say, though, that in terms of the provision regarding indecency in the definition of the common bawdy house, there's no requirement whatsoever for money to change hands. |
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Bad Neighbours 97mins LAUGHS of the lowest common denominator abound in this bawdy but brilliant frat boy versus the neighbours comedy. |
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But this bawdy and very clever buddy film suggests we may have turned a corner. |
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It can be a little freewheeling at times, but Dom and Dickie are such outlandish and bawdy villains that you forgive them their sins. |
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Essentially a cabaret, it featured fabulous frocks, bawdy humour and a range of pop hits. |
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Traditional songs of mysterious, supernatural incidents and mystical apparitions alternate with amusing, bawdy songs of villains, smugglers, tricksters and swaggering marriage swindlers. |
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I'd like to give a quick overview of a typical gay bathhouse, the physical environment, and then talk a little bit about the impact of bawdy house charges on those charged. |
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Raavan and Eddy is set in one of those chawls and is a fine evocation of Mumbai's multicultural world, its slow-motion anarchies, its bawdy humour and its never-say-die spirit. |
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The Queen's annualThe broadcast had a combined audience of 7.8 million viewers on BBC1 and ITV, more than half the viewing nation at 3pm on Christmas Day, just beating BBC1's bawdy sitcom Mrs Brown's Boys to the top spot. |
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Trafficked women of Asian ethnicity, who may be recruited within Canada or abroad, have been identified in bawdy houses operated by Asian organized crime groups. |
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Foxe downplays Chaucer's bawdy and amorous writing, insisting that it all testifies to his piety. |
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Related to the fable was the more bawdy fabliau, which covered topics such as cuckolding and corrupt clergy. |
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The Purgatoriam Hibernicum is a humorous and bawdy burlesque or travesty on the Roman poet Virgil's Aeneid. |
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Central to the book's 11th chapter, called Sirens, are two barmaids and their occasionally bawdy customers. |
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In former times, however, a sign showing a woman's hand indicated a bawdy house, or brothel. |
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Vincent in which she plays Daka, a pregnant Russian stripper and the girlfriend of Bill Murray's bawdy, curmudgeonly Vietnam war vet, Vincent. |
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The after-dinner circuit, telling bawdy tales of Coisty and Goramy on the batter? |
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In the short term they'd probably be just as well trying to eke a little more out of the 30s with a bawdy spin-off series called Mrs Patmore's House Of Ill Repute. |
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In the short term they'd probably be just as well trying to eke a little more out of the 1930s with a bawdy spin-off series called Mrs Patmore's House Of Ill Repute. |
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The joke with which he invariably finished almost always made me laugh and, even though it was usually bawdy, my wife would chuckle when I read it out to her. |
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I abridged with domfine norsemanship till I had done abate her maidan race, my baresark bride and knew her fleshly when with all my bawdy did I her whorship. |
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He was an atheist, a rationalist, a medical student of no great distinction, an SP punter, a singer of bawdy songs, an acknowledged expert in matters erotic. |
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The bawdy bird also coughs, grunts and snorts like an old man. |
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