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1 All his accumulated nervous agitation was discharged on Maud like a thunderbolt.
2 Countess Maud was set for a record run.
3 Maud Bailey was a thin-skinned Princess.
4 Poor Maud can only totter along at this rate.
5 Though that wasn't entirely true, for Maud would, and she would probably even bring it off.
6 Freud was right, Maud thought, vigorously rubbing her white legs, desire lies on the other side of repugnance.
7 In 1888 he married Maud, daughter of Charles Hindle, Brighton hotelier.
8 Maud attributes some 15% of this increase to organic growth, with acquisitions providing the balance.
9 Maud talked with a mixture of pedantry and horse sense that impressed him as singular and forcible.
10 Edith died in 1871 and Maud and her sister Kathleen were cared for by a nurse and governess.
11 The Maud Report considered there was urgent need for reform and change within local government.
12 Mildred looked up and saw Maud swooping over the gates,[www.Sentencedict.com] waving her hat in the air.
13 Finally, the Maud Report made some interesting suggestions for improving the image of local government and its relations with the public.
14 Maud and I have seen you down there chatting away to the empty water.
15 He had married his second wife Maud by no later than Michaelmas term 1245.
16 Then like a fool he had spoken of Maud, and Sarah had seen him as nothing more than a philanderer.
17 I've seen Countess Maud three times ... up in the gallery, of course.
18 Maud Gonne was the muse of W.B. Yeats, the Irish poet.
19 Sometimes Maud rode with her, sometimes Charlie, occasionally both.
20 Maud closed The Great Ventriloquist with a snap.
21 I'm trying to track down my old Aunt Maud.
22 Maud Gonne 's letter about taking them off O'Connell street at night: disgrace to our Irish capital.
23 I felt certain that soon my mother would be plunging into rehearsals for Countess Maud.
24 Their dad, she felt(sentencedict.com), deserved a far more loving wife than Maud had become.
25 Dad felt he had treasures in his kids, and he had to give Maud some credit for that.
26 Sir George drew the curtains, and motioned Roland and Maud to sit down by the fire, in the velvet chairs.
27 His system reacted to contact with her in ways he had never experienced with Maud, or with any other woman.
28 Several hours passed while he sat there, knowing that Maud would be inconsolable at having missed a charity dinner.
29 He slept ten or twelve hours a day and didn't answer Maud when she telephoned.
30 Nevertheless I had a brief affair with the redoubtable Maud.