10 Results for: (Concept:09963159-n)
SidSentence
47452 He is curiously employed at present , for , being an amateur astronomer , he has an excellent telescope , with which he lies upon the roof of his own house and sweeps the moor all day in the hope of catching a glimpse of the escaped convict .
47455 And now , having brought you up to date on the escaped convict , the Stapletons , Dr Mortimer , and Frankland of Lafter Hall , let me end on that which is most important and tell you more about the Barrymores , and especially about the surprising development of last night .
47840 We are after the convict , and a hell-hound , as likely as not , after us .
47861 At the same moment the convict screamed out a curse at us and hurled a rock which splintered up against the boulder which had sheltered us .
48044 I thought of the convict out upon the bleak , cold , shelterless moor .
48110 He 's in ' hiding , too , but he 's not a convict , so far as I can make out .
48329 What about the convict on the moor ? '
48347 It was on his track , and not upon the convict 's , that Frankland had stumbled .
48685 ' To hear a hound upon the moor would not work a hard man like this convict into such a paroxysm of terror that he would risk recapture by screaming wildly for help .
49331 No wonder the poor devil of a convict ran and screamed , even as our friend did , and as we ourselves might have done , when he saw such a creature bounding through the darkness of the moor upon his track .

Language:    Concept:    C-lemma:    Word:    Lemma: SID (from): SID (to):    Sentiment:    POS: ? POS: ? POS: ? POS: ? POS: ? POS: ? POS: ? Limit:   


More detail about the NTU Multilingual Corpus Interface (0.1)

Developers: Luís Morgado da Costa <lmorgado.dacosta@gmail.com> ; Francis Bond <bond@ieee.org>