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Examples
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Unquestionably, that is a capitalist formula for resolving some needs.
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"Unquestionably," said Jack; "for instance, if you miss that bird, so much the worse for you, and so much the better for the petrel."
Willis the Pilot Paul Adrien
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"Unquestionably," said the Marchese, "you are entitled to stand upon your dignity, Chevalier."
Casanova's Homecoming Arthur Schnitzler 1896
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"Unquestionably," said Charlotte, "that is plain; rain-drops readily unite and form streams; and when we were children, it was our delight to play with quicksilver, and wonder at the little globules splitting and parting and running into one another."
The German Classics of the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Volume 02 Masterpieces of German Literature Translated into English. in Twenty Volumes Kuno Francke 1892
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"Unquestionably," answers Uncle Jack, with great gravity, as he assists the ladies into the yellow omnibus.
Starlight Ranch and Other Stories of Army Life on the Frontier Charles King 1888
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"Unquestionably," said Madame Moronval, growing still more erect.
Jack 1877 Alphonse Daudet 1868
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"Unquestionably," said Sam, with a mingled laugh and shudder, in which his companions joined -- as regards the shudder at least, if not the laugh.
The Battery and the Boiler Adventures in Laying of Submarine Electric Cables 1859
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"Unquestionably," replied the nobleman; "but take care not to chip the edges of the cover as you put in your crow-bars, for I propose to carry off the tomb and present it to the British Museum."
The Works of Theophile Gautier, Volume 5 The Romance of a Mummy and Egypt Th��ophile Gautier 1841
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"Unquestionably," said Edward, bowing to Lucy; "I never felt so much flattered in my life before, nor ever can again, unless by a similar comparison with the same fair object."
The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain The Works of William Carleton, Volume One William Carleton 1831
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"Unquestionably," said the baron; "and the first thing to be done, is to inform the police of what has happened, so that the body may be got up; and as I have now seen enough of the estate to satisfy me as regards its capabilities, I decide at once upon taking it, if I can agree upon the conditions of the tenancy, and I will purchase it, if the price be such as I think suitable."
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