Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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Madame d'O is a believer; she truly believes she is doing the right thing, but that some sacrifices must be made for the greater good.
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To prove him wrong, she wrote the graphic Histoire d'O The Story of O under the pseudonym 'Pauline Reage.'
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Between these two is Temudjin Oh, an operative for the Concern who reports to Madame d'O as she becomes known and was trained by Mrs. Mulverhill.
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Madame d'O is a believer; she truly believes she is doing the right thing, but that some sacrifices must be made for the greater good.
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To prove him wrong, she wrote the graphic Histoire d'O The Story of O under the pseudonym 'Pauline Reage.'
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Between these two is Temudjin Oh, an operative for the Concern who reports to Madame d'O as she becomes known and was trained by Mrs. Mulverhill.
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Thus an example passage in the book has a Dtektive (detective) asking the villain: "6 j t'aspRge d'O 2 kologne histoar 2 partaG le odeurs ke tu me fe subir?"
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The Bacharach-echoing instrumental "Let's Go Away for a While" would stand out during lounge night at Bar d'O.
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Assault, rape, brutal domination, exquisite torture — such activities figure largely in what might be called the higher pornography (L'Histoire d'O, for instance), where they are the expected lot of the heroine-victim.
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Their tete-a-tete lasted two hours and more: just towards the end, Madame d'O was let in; soon after the Marechal d'Estrees entered, and soon after that the Duchesse de Bourgogne came out with them, and returned into the great cabinet of Madame de Maintenon.
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