The ruffians wore goatskin hats, gritty cloaks, and leggings of leather, all diffusing the odor of a hundred bathless nights and days. |
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Within a few hours even the toughest of the tough ruffians would break down and start confessing. |
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He led his rapidly growing army of ruffians throughout China and soon assumed the throne, from soldier of fortune to emperor. |
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For all the respectable clothes they wore, they had the looks of ruffians about them. |
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Vidocq served a lucrative apprenticeship with various ruffians, vagabonds and swindlers. |
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They were tired of ruffians trying to loot the place for finger-licking baked potato skins. |
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On New Year's Day 1753 an eighteen-year-old London maidservant called Elizabeth Canning was abducted in the City by two ruffians. |
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They used to say soccer is a gentleman's game played by ruffians and rugby is a ruffian's game played by gentlemen. |
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This first feature filmed in Irish follows the tale of an aging producer of poitin and the two young ruffians who rob him. |
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He was, in fact, a leader of a gang of Essex ruffians, whose speciality was robbery with violence. |
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Good heavens, you could have been killed going into a den of ruffians like that. |
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But Morgan makes enemies right away when he foils a mugging by a gang of local ruffians. |
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Obviously, it was a case of collusion between the state and the lawbreaking ruffians. |
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No cooked food could be sold, and shops were not to shelter ruffians, thieves, or prostitutes. |
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Albert is a regular at this place, bringing along his gang of ruffians and louts to watch him eat sloppily and hurl insults at everyone that walks by. |
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As the proportion of homicides committed with firearms surged, even the swaggering ruffians of local bars may have thought twice before challenging any and all onlookers. |
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Amidst the many ruffians scattered about the bar, this visitor wearing a brown cotton suit with matching cream tie stood out like a solitary star in the nighttime sky. |
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When you come out of the nine ruffians, you come out of the three planes, and then you die three times. |
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The ruffians, not very eager to risk their lives for a reward that nobody could give them anymore, ran away into the rain without looking back. |
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Uighurs complain that the Han Chinese tend to look down on them as uncultured ruffians. |
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She stops to rescue a cat being teased by a couple of ruffians. |
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Almost one third of it is devoted to an epic chase scene involving Max, a semi-trailer and an army of highway ruffians. |
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As for violence, though there is tripping in soccer, it is a pantywaist affair when compared to the ruffians of ice hockey or the fearful hitting of pro football. |
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Khabarov's ruffians had stumbled on the homeland of the new ambitious rulers of China. |
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Bands of ruffians, some of them veterans of the liberation war, others merely pretending to be, have invaded over 1,000 farms. |
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That prompted Mr Ortega's ruffians to block access to the National Assembly. |
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Very soon after the intelligence of the posture of affairs arrived at Paola wheeled vehicles left that town at flying speed loaded with border ruffians and proslavery friends of Quantrill. |
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They decided that if they heard that a group of border ruffians was in their area, they would meet at the Vaughn house, which was the largest in the area. |
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Then, while all of the security guards are busy restraining the ruffians, walk straight backstage and wait for an opportunity to talk to whomever you want. |
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The tactics of the violent ruffians failed in this year's election. |
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The ruffians wore goatskin hats, gritty cloaks, and leggings of leather. |
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Move quickly Kansas, or the border ruffians may yet ride again. |
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It is, however, outrageous that such ruffians should be able to take advantage of others' misfortune without any police action and, in so doing, prevent aid reaching those really in need. |
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On a trip through a dangers quarter in the capital, I was stopped by a group of 10 to 15 year old ruffians with weapons and I was brought blindfolded to their leader. |
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In this area lived a very marginal population: Confederate deserters, men who refused to fight in the East, disillusioned gold diggers, American and Mexican outlaws and ruffians of all types. |
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We can move gently into middle age, recognizing with a slight chuckle that we are our own parents now, metaphorically shouting on the front lawn at the ruffians around us. |
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More dangerously, wealthy individuals would often respond to satire by having the suspected poet physically attacked by ruffians. |
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