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Examples
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M. Dacier is no more; "and we never live to see his fellow."
Letters for Literary Ladies: To Which is Added, An Essay on the Noble Science of Self-Justification 1798
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'Come, you can say whether there's anything in it,' Dacier's host pushed him.
Diana of the Crossways — Volume 4 George Meredith 1868
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'Come, you can say whether there's anything in it,' Dacier's host pushed him.
Diana of the Crossways — Complete George Meredith 1868
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'Come, you can say whether there's anything in it,' Dacier's host pushed him.
Complete Project Gutenberg Works of George Meredith George Meredith 1868
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Passions Between Women, Emma Donoghue discusses the similarities between Dacier and Robinsons sanitized versions of
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Dacier, was known as "the greatest French woman Hellenist" of her era.
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Madame Dacier sides with the vast country, the nursery and the tree, and would have nothing curtailed.
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Dacier, giving way to the spirit of a commentator, observes that
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I will suppose that Madame Dacier had been the finest woman in
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Madame Dacier, in her preface to the “Iliad,” remarks very sensibly, after Eustathius, bishop of Thessalonica, and Huet, bishop of Avranches, that every neighboring nation of the
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