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Examples
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Unthank's infatuation for her was patent to the whole neighbourhood and
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Unthank's spirit don't come and howl for your blood beneath their window.
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So to my wife, took her up at Unthank's, and in our way home did shew her the tall woman in Holborne, which I have seen before; and I measured her, and she is, without shoes, just six feet five inches high, and they say not above twenty-one years old.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, Feb/Mar 1668/69 Pepys, Samuel 1669
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I with W. Hewer took up my wife at Unthank's, and so home, and there with pleasure to read and talk, and so to supper, and put into writing, in merry terms, our agreement between my wife and me, about L30 a-year, and so to bed.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, January 1668/69 Pepys, Samuel 1669
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So after dinner we away and to Dancre's, and there saw our picture of Greenwich in doing, which is mighty pretty, and so to White Hall, my wife to Unthank's, and I attended with Lord Brouncker the King and Council, about the proposition of balancing Storekeeper's accounts and there presented Hosier's book, and it was mighty well resented and approved of.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, Feb/Mar 1668/69 Pepys, Samuel 1669
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That done, I with W. Hewer took up my wife at Unthank's, and so home, and there with pleasure to read and talk, and so to supper, and put into writing, in merry terms, our agreement between my wife and me, about L30 a-year, and so to bed.
Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1669 N.S. Samuel Pepys 1668
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Unthank's, and in our way home did shew her the tall woman in Holborne, which I have seen before; and I measured her, and she is, without shoes, just six feet five inches high, and they say not above twenty-one years old.
Diary of Samuel Pepys — Complete 1669 N.S. Samuel Pepys 1668
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So to my wife, took her up at Unthank's, and in our way home did shew her the tall woman in Holborne, which I have seen before; and I measured her, and she is, without shoes, just six feet five inches high, and they say not above twenty-one years old.
Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 72: February/March 1668-69 Samuel Pepys 1668
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Left my wife at Unthank's, and I to the Treasury, where we waited on the Lords Commissioners about Sir D. Gawden's matters, and so took her up again at night, and home to the office, and so home with W. Hewer, and to talk about our quarrel with Middleton, and so to supper and to bed.
Diary of Samuel Pepys, December 1668 Pepys, Samuel 1668
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I took up my wife and boy at Unthank's, and from there to
Diary of Samuel Pepys — Volume 69: November 1668 Samuel Pepys 1668
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