This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
51498 | Could I grow them here? |
51498 | Huh? |
51498 | Seventy- thirty? |
51498 | What are you growing here? |
51498 | You mean if I become a Jube again, I must stay one? |
51498 | You mean you have n''t heard about upklin seeds? |
51498 | Had they sold him a pup? |
51498 | He hesitated only at the last, stark question,"How much are you prepared to pay?" |
51498 | He said, picking his words with the greatest care,"Would a further metamorphosis be possible?" |
51498 | Is there enough there to cover it?" |
51498 | Now if it was upklin seeds--""Upklin seeds?" |
51498 | Without looking up, he asked,"Is the period of metamorphosis, always for a term of five years?" |
61136 | An e? 61136 Do you mean me?" |
61136 | Frequency and tone? |
61136 | I''m an e? |
61136 | Me? 61136 Now, what on Earth did that?" |
61136 | Ship? |
61136 | Summer lightning? |
61136 | What else? |
61136 | Where are you? |
61136 | Where''s my ship? |
61136 | But how? |
61136 | But what is an e being?" |
61136 | But who wants to be a secret air defense weapon locked in a Leyden jar? |
61136 | Hello, hello, what''s this?" |
61136 | How can a being based on energy, like me, communicate with a being based on matter, like him? |
61136 | If an e being eats energy as food and drink, what does an e being''s conversion product make? |
61136 | So this was a fusion bomb, was it? |
61136 | Speculative philosopher, yes?" |
61136 | What is it?" |
61136 | Who does? |
61467 | Are you going to have room for me too? |
61467 | Fine,she said,"but how am I supposed to cross the muck?" |
61467 | Graybar? |
61467 | Graybar? |
61467 | How do you handle the Sliders? |
61467 | How would you run things here? |
61467 | Kershaw again? 61467 Names?" |
61467 | Smuggling? 61467 Tell me, what are the odds on getting killed doing this?" |
61467 | The girl will inherit this racket some day, wo n''t she? |
61467 | What do you want? |
61467 | What happened to the other muck men who went out today? |
61467 | What happened? |
61467 | What types of changelings do you have orders for right now, doctor? |
61467 | What''s the pay range? |
61467 | What''s up? |
61467 | When are you coming? |
61467 | Where are you? |
61467 | Why such a difference? 61467 You know what I think?" |
61467 | And why shovel hands instead of proper tools? |
61467 | But do n''t your conversions make the changeling comfortable in his new environment?" |
61467 | But what if it was Dorr, coming back alone to dispose of him without any witnesses? |
61467 | But what''s the rap?" |
61467 | Double their strength, and perhaps give them web feet, but why legs like a frog? |
61467 | I do n''t suppose you could make this machine stand up straight?" |
61467 | IV"Are you hurt?" |
61467 | Next time they stopped the girl turned to Asa with a frown and asked,"Just how does Dorr think he can get away with this?" |
61467 | What was the night like on Jordan''s Planet? |
10337 | Oh, Silvia, are you not wilful and cunning? 10337 What have you done with Mrs. Tebrick, sir? |
10337 | What is now to become of me? 10337 What is this, Silvia?" |
10337 | Where are your children, Silvia? |
10337 | Am I not dreaming?" |
10337 | And had she not always found him a good husband to her? |
10337 | And has he not reason for his pride? |
10337 | And he asked her, were they not married? |
10337 | And then speaking to her in this manner:"Are you not ashamed, Silvia, to be such a madcap, such a wicked hoyden? |
10337 | And where is she now, sir?" |
10337 | Are you a monster in your soul as well as in your body? |
10337 | Are you trying to escape from me? |
10337 | At last however he resolved on it, and all the more as his vixen kept asking him in the gentlest way:"Might she not go out into the garden?" |
10337 | Aye, indeed, what would become of his vixen and her children? |
10337 | But in the middle of the night he woke up with his head very clear, and said to himself in wonder,"Am I not a madman? |
10337 | But then, catching her grave look, he would say:"Do you think I jest on these things, my dear? |
10337 | Can a man have his honour sullied by a beast? |
10337 | Can my dignity allow of my being jealous of a beast? |
10337 | Cork?" |
10337 | Could he still love her after that? |
10337 | Does not this butchery and eating of raw meat and rabbit''s fur disgust you? |
10337 | Firstly he asked himself: Was not his wife unfaithful to him, had she not prostituted herself to a beast? |
10337 | For he asked himself also:"Was he not jealous?" |
10337 | Have you forgotten what it is to be a woman?" |
10337 | He called to her then, saying:"Silvia, Silvia, why do you do this? |
10337 | I love you, Silvia; is it because of that that you want to fly from me to go into the world where you will be in danger of your life always? |
10337 | Is it such torment to be with me?" |
10337 | May she not have thought it easier to change him thus than ever to change herself back into being a woman? |
10337 | So that with his gazing on her and knowing her well, even in such a shape, yet asking himself at every moment:"Can it be she? |
10337 | What do you do there?" |
10337 | What dreadful change is this?" |
10337 | What if they were foxes? |
10337 | When he had forgot the hour for his meal she would come and tug his sleeve and tell him as if she spoke:"Husband, are we to have no luncheon to- day?" |
10337 | When he was outside, however, he asked Mr. Tebrick:"You do n''t have many visitors now, eh?" |
10337 | Where does she live?" |
10337 | Why are you so savage now? |
10337 | he said very quietly,"what is this? |
5200 | Am I less sensitive than I used to be, then? 5200 Are n''t you coming any closer, then? |
5200 | Can the chief clerk come in to see you now then? 5200 Dead? |
5200 | Did you understand a word of all that? |
5200 | Gregor, Gregor, he called,"what''s wrong?" |
5200 | Mother? |
5200 | My child, said her father with sympathy and obvious understanding,"what are we to do?" |
5200 | Well? 5200 What do you mean? |
5200 | What is it you want then? 5200 What now, then? |
5200 | What shall we take now, then? 5200 What''s happened to me?" |
5200 | What''s happened? |
5200 | Where is our breakfast? 5200 And what''s more, would he have been entirely wrong in this case? 5200 And why was she crying? 5200 Are n''t you well? 5200 At the other side door his sister came plaintively:Gregor? |
5200 | But what now, if all this peace and wealth and comfort should come to a horrible and frightening end? |
5200 | Ca n''t you understand I have to see him? |
5200 | Did n''t you want to go somewhere?" |
5200 | Did you hear the way Gregor spoke just now?" |
5200 | Do you need anything?" |
5200 | Had he really wanted to transform his room into a cave, a warm room fitted out with the nice furniture he had inherited? |
5200 | Had the alarm clock not rung? |
5200 | He really ought to have expected things to have changed, but still, still, was that really his father? |
5200 | He seemed, unfortunately, to have no proper teeth- how was he, then, to grasp the key? |
5200 | How can that be Gregor? |
5200 | How had his sister managed to get dressed so quickly? |
5200 | Should he really call for help though, even apart from the fact that all the doors were locked? |
5200 | So where are you going, in to the office? |
5200 | So why did his sister not go and join the others? |
5200 | Someone must have heard them in the kitchen, as Gregor''s father called out:"Is the playing perhaps unpleasant for the gentlemen? |
5200 | The chief clerk now raised his voice,"Mr. Samsa", he called to him,"what is wrong? |
5200 | Was he an animal if music could captivate him so? |
5200 | What about if he reported sick? |
5200 | What should he do now? |
5200 | Who, in this tired and overworked family, would have had time to give more attention to Gregor than was absolutely necessary? |
5200 | Why did Gregor have to be the only one condemned to work for a company where they immediately became highly suspicious at the slightest shortcoming? |
5200 | Will you please just let me leave? |
5200 | Will you report everything accurately, then? |
5200 | Would Gregor''s elderly mother now have to go and earn money? |
5200 | Would his sister have to go and earn money? |
5200 | Yes, but was it possible to quietly sleep through that furniture- rattling noise? |
5200 | Yes? |
51519 | Am I stopping you? |
51519 | Any family? |
51519 | Anything for this afternoon? |
51519 | But_ how_? |
51519 | Can_ I_? |
51519 | Do you feel all right? |
51519 | How long''s it been this way? |
51519 | How old is that boar pig? |
51519 | How would you police such a world? 51519 Is it just the general health factor?" |
51519 | Is that what you''re doing? 51519 Is the cat out here a lot?" |
51519 | Is this possible? 51519 Just get back?" |
51519 | No-- law? |
51519 | Pipe dreams for hogs? |
51519 | Same litter and dosage? |
51519 | The whole year? |
51519 | What are these for? |
51519 | What is it? |
51519 | What was it? |
51519 | What was that? |
51519 | What''s going on here? |
51519 | What''s wrong with it? |
51519 | When did you find him? |
51519 | Who? |
51519 | Why do you have to get mixed up in it? |
51519 | Worried? 51519 You want me to stop scanning?" |
51519 | You-- Frank-- will you stay for a few days? |
51519 | Amos, do you believe in werewolves?" |
51519 | And if it did, and they began selling it...."What would it do to human beings?" |
51519 | And why had n''t he been able to save himself? |
51519 | Been able to get your margin up any?" |
51519 | But what regulates the colony? |
51519 | But what was the choice? |
51519 | By the way, how you coming on that animal hormone?" |
51519 | Can a human mind be compressed into a cat''s brain?" |
51519 | Do n''t you remember the book we read three years ago? |
51519 | Do n''t you suppose you could call me Amos now?" |
51519 | How do you mean?" |
51519 | How many men do you have on it?" |
51519 | How''s the family? |
51519 | Mescaline, especially?" |
51519 | Mr. Parry, are you familiar with hypnotics? |
51519 | Physically, I mean?" |
51519 | Question is, how''d it happen?" |
51519 | Scanning what?" |
51519 | Still morning out there, eh? |
51519 | What is an animal? |
51519 | What maintains the pattern?" |
51519 | What would happen if something removed the wall and woke up the other ninety- nine per cent?" |
51519 | When can I call about the autopsy?" |
51519 | When do you think we can have it?" |
51519 | Why? |
31664 | Ah,Iversen remarked waggishly,"so there are one or two things you do n''t know about Flimbot, eh?" |
31664 | And then what will we do? |
31664 | And what comes next?... 31664 Are n''t you happy to see your little friend again, Harkaway?" |
31664 | But I can never forgive myself, sir--"Are you trying to go over my head? |
31664 | But if the fuel tanks are empty,he asked of no one in particular,"where did the power come from?" |
31664 | But if the soul transmigrates and not the body,he argued,"what harm is there in consuming the vacated receptacle?" |
31664 | But that''s right-- a butterfly does live only a day, does n''t it? |
31664 | But why bother with all that? |
31664 | Did n''t the Flimflim say everything on Flimbot was mine? 31664 Did you bring along the proper food for that-- that thing? |
31664 | Do n''t tell me you profess to speak the language already? |
31664 | Do n''t their ships have any? |
31664 | Does it, indeed? 31664 Does it?" |
31664 | Flimbot or_ mpoola_? |
31664 | Have you no tolerance, Captain, no appreciation of the joys of golden youth? |
31664 | Have you tested those air and soil samples yet? |
31664 | He seems to communicate and that is the ultimate objective of language, is it not? |
31664 | How can you have learned all about their religion, their doctrine of reincarnation, in just four ridiculously short weeks? |
31664 | How can you say that? |
31664 | How come you gentlemen are still with us? |
31664 | How do you know all this? |
31664 | How do you know we do n''t? |
31664 | How do you know what we become? 31664 I mean does it appear like that, sir? |
31664 | Is he-- is he going to die? |
31664 | Is there no end to your accomplishments, Lieutenant? |
31664 | Look here, sir,he began tensely,"have you read Harkaway''s book about_ mpoola_?" |
31664 | Looks it, does n''t it? |
31664 | Looks it, does n''t it? |
31664 | Oh, have you found yourself at last? |
31664 | On what basis? |
31664 | Once the ship has been purchased, what will our course be? 31664 Playful little fellow, is n''t he?" |
31664 | Remarkable, I''ll grant you, but is it accurate? |
31664 | Sir,said the first officer,"may I speak frankly?" |
31664 | Then why did the Flimbotzik fill the tanks with wine when I distinctly told him to ask for water? |
31664 | They go through space, do n''t they? 31664 Well, I''ve been here two weeks and I''ve survived, have n''t I?" |
31664 | What I''d like to know is what happened to the_ mk''oog_, then--"The m''koog, you mean? 31664 What am I going to do?" |
31664 | What else? |
31664 | What is the extremest intensification of individuality? 31664 What truly sensitive soul could exist in a stultifying atmosphere like this?" |
31664 | What''s that thing you''re carrying there? |
31664 | Which great discovery? |
31664 | Who was seeking what? |
31664 | Why disaster? |
31664 | Why doom? |
31664 | Would you have_ wanted_ them to be hostile? |
31664 | You-- you speak Terran? |
31664 | A new- born infant was weak; why not a new- born adult, then? |
31664 | Ah, everywhere it goes, humanity spreads the fell seeds of death and destruction--""Are you a doctor or a veterinarian?" |
31664 | And even if such be needful, why must the personal essence be trammeled by the same old worn- out habiliments of error? |
31664 | And who has to discover it? |
31664 | Are we sure that death is not life and life is not death? |
31664 | But how can I leave Bridey in the hands of the IEE(E)?" |
31664 | But were n''t the Flimbotzik virtually primitive? |
31664 | Can we say definitely and definitively that life is life and death is death? |
31664 | Cuddly little fellow, is n''t he?" |
31664 | Ironic, is n''t it?" |
31664 | Is Man the highest form of life in an irrational cosmos? |
31664 | Is there no escaping that cretin''s name?" |
31664 | It makes our discovery the more worthwhile, does n''t it?" |
31664 | So they were all there, were they? |
31664 | The book began:"What is the difference between life and death? |
31664 | We''ve become great pals, have n''t we, little fellow?" |
31664 | Were not even his last moments to be free from persecution? |
31664 | What did you say the name of the species as a whole was?" |
31664 | What good is a body like this if I can not use it to its fullest?" |
31664 | What if the Flimbotzik are less primitive than you fancied? |
31664 | What, he wondered, had come to pass? |
31664 | What, in other words, are we to do?" |
31664 | Why could n''t it have been one of the other officers who had discovered the Flimbotzik? |
31664 | Why did they have to take their embarrassment and humiliation out on an innocent little animal? |
31664 | Why did this one go like that? |
31664 | Why should I not speak your tongue?" |
1666 | And Byrrhena spake unto mee and sayd, I pray you Cousine how like you our countrey? |
1666 | And dost thou live here as a ghost or hogge, to our great shame and ignominy? |
1666 | And if it had so come to passe that this fearefull maid had beene slaine by him, what danger had we beene in? |
1666 | And moreover she sayd, O Lucius, I have nourished thee with myne owne proper hand: and why not? |
1666 | And to counterfeit the matter, he would come to Charites and say: O what a losse have I had of my friend, my fellow, my companion Lepolemus? |
1666 | And when I was out I cried, O sirrah Hostler where art thou? |
1666 | And wil you not cease in your husbands armes? |
1666 | And you( you harlot) doe you not goe to see your parents? |
1666 | And( espying a Church on the top of a high hill) she said, What can I tell whether my husband and master be there or no? |
1666 | Are you in the mind that you will not tarry in Thessaly? |
1666 | Art thou afraid of the old woman more then halfe dead, whom with a stripe of thy heele thou maist easily dispatch? |
1666 | Be you not afraid of spirits? |
1666 | But I finely feigning and colouring the matter for the time, did breake off his talk, and tooke him by the hand and sayd, Why tarry we? |
1666 | But I pray you tell me how have you been the cause and mean of my trouble and sorrow? |
1666 | But Venus began to cry and sayd, What hath my sonne gotten any Love? |
1666 | But what gainest thou through my delay? |
1666 | But whither shall I fly? |
1666 | Canst thou not goe? |
1666 | Come on, we will beare you company? |
1666 | Commest thou hither to eat, where we should weepe and lament? |
1666 | Couldest not thou( that so often in his life time diddest spurne and kicke him) defend him now at the point of death by the like meane? |
1666 | Did not I alwayes give thee a charge? |
1666 | Did not I gently will thee to beware? |
1666 | Do dead men use to run away in this Countrey? |
1666 | Doest thou not know( Foole as thou art) if thou be naked, if ten Gyants should assaile thee, they could not spoyle or rob thee? |
1666 | Doth he seeme alwayes unto you to be a childe? |
1666 | For what availed the theeves: the beasts savage: thy great servitude: the ill and dangerous waits: the long passages: the feare of death every day? |
1666 | How happy shall we be, that shall see this Infant nourished amongst so great plenty of Treasure? |
1666 | How shall I represse this beast? |
1666 | I being then forced by necessity, though it were against my wil, uncovered the bodies: but O good Lord what a strange sight did I see, what a monster? |
1666 | I pray thee gentle bird that doest serve me so faithfully, tell me what she is, and what is her name that hath troubled my son in such sort? |
1666 | If Jupiter transformed himselfe into a Bull, why may it not be that under the shape of this Asse, is hidden the figure of a man, or some power divine? |
1666 | If you be a bird, where shall I seek you, and when shall I see you? |
1666 | In their returne homeward they murmured within themselves, saying, How say you sister to so apparent a lye of Psyches? |
1666 | In what cave or darknesse shall I hide my selfe, to avoid the furor of Venus? |
1666 | Is this an honest thing, is this honourable to thy parents? |
1666 | Know you not in what place you be? |
1666 | Know you not that we use to take no gage, unless it be either plate or Jewels? |
1666 | Knowst thou not that the theeves have ordained to slay thee? |
1666 | Mary( quoth shee) do you see these Bay windowes, which on one side abut to the gates of the city, and on the other side to the next lane? |
1666 | O rash and bold lampe, the vile ministery of love, how darest thou bee so bold as to burne the god of all fire? |
1666 | Or have you forgotten of what yeares he is? |
1666 | Or shall I seeke for counsel of every poore rusticall woman? |
1666 | Or why did they not slay thee likewise? |
1666 | Passe you all the day and the night in weeping? |
1666 | Saw you not sister what was in the house, what great store of jewels, what glittering robes, what Gemmes, what gold we trod on? |
1666 | Shall I aske ayd of myne enemy Sobriety, whom I have often offended to engender thee? |
1666 | The Hostler lying behinde the stable doore upon a pallet, and half asleepe, What( quoth hee) doe you not know that the wayes be very dangerous? |
1666 | Then Thrasillus having found opportunity to worke his treason, said to Lepolemus: What stand we here amazed? |
1666 | Then Venus with indignation cried out, What is it she? |
1666 | Then answered he, I will tell you soone, but brother I pray you tell mee of your comming from the isle of Euboea, and how you sped by the way? |
1666 | Then he laughed upon me saying: How long shall we nourish and keepe this fiery Asse in vaine? |
1666 | Then one of the shepheards said: Why doe we not make sacrifice of this common adulterous Asse? |
1666 | Then one of them that came last answered, Why are you only ignorant, that the greater the number is, the sooner they may rob and spoyle the house? |
1666 | Then said Fotis, Wil you go about to deceive me now, and inforce me to work my own sorrow? |
1666 | Then said I, It is well nigh day, and moreover, what can theeves take from him that hath nothing? |
1666 | Then said the shepheards, What? |
1666 | Then there came forth a maid which said, Ho sirrah that knocks so fast, in what kinde of sort will you borrow money? |
1666 | Then thought I with my selfe, Alasse where is faith? |
1666 | Then with resemblance of admiration, What( quoth I) is she so excellent a person as you name her to be? |
1666 | To what a point am I now driven? |
1666 | To whom I answered, I pray you maid speak more gently, and tel me whether thy master be within or no? |
1666 | To whom he made answere saying: Doe you looke for any meate or drinke, or any other refection here? |
1666 | To whom shall I seeme to tell any similitude of truth, when as I shall tell the trueth in deed? |
1666 | We most humbly intreat you to pardon his fault if he have accorded to the mind of any maiden: what do you not know that he is a young man? |
1666 | What a comfort will it be unto all the house? |
1666 | What crime hast thou committed? |
1666 | What did he think that I was a bawd, by whose shew he fell acquainted with the maid? |
1666 | What do I finde heere? |
1666 | What do I know whether he( whom I seeke for) be in his mothers house or no? |
1666 | What is he that in so short a space can become so old? |
1666 | What is that? |
1666 | What judgement was there likewise amongst the Athenian lawyers, sage and expert in all sciences? |
1666 | What lodging shall I seek? |
1666 | What meane you to revenge your selves upon us, that doe you no harme? |
1666 | What meane you to rise at this time of night? |
1666 | What shall I do? |
1666 | What sudden change of all my sorrows? |
1666 | What thinke you to gaine by us? |
1666 | What, dost thou make thy selfe ignorant, as though thou didst not understand what travell wee have taken in searching for thee? |
1666 | What, thinke you( quoth she) to deprive our young men of the price of your ransome? |
1666 | What? |
1666 | When night was passed Venus called Psyches, and said, Seest thou yonder Forest that extendeth out in length with the river? |
1666 | Where is his great and new cut? |
1666 | Where is his wound? |
1666 | Where is remorse of conscience? |
1666 | Where is the Sponge? |
1666 | Wherefore sell you this fish so deare, which is not worth a halfepenny? |
1666 | Which when I heard, I sayd to one who passed by, What is here to doe? |
1666 | Which when her husband did heare, he demanded of her by what reason she knew it? |
1666 | Whither shall I goe? |
1666 | Who is he that passeth by the way and will not take me up? |
1666 | Why did they spare thee that stood by and saw them commit that horrible fact? |
1666 | Why do I not take a good heart, and offer my selfe with humilitie unto her, whose anger I have wrought? |
1666 | Why do we not give him to some body for he earneth not his hay? |
1666 | Why doe I delay? |
1666 | Why dost thou not looke for thy death? |
1666 | Why dost thou not rather tell us where thou hast hidden the boy whom thou hast slaine? |
1666 | Why dost thou rashly yeeld unto thy last perill and danger? |
1666 | Why dost thou seek thine own harme, and mine likewise? |
1666 | Why knocke ye your breasts for me? |
1666 | Why leese we so worthy a prey with our feminine hearts? |
1666 | Why lose wee the pleasure of this faire morning? |
1666 | Why show we our selves like dastards? |
1666 | Why soyle ye your faces with teares, which I ought to adore and worship? |
1666 | Why teare you my eyes in yours? |
1666 | Why trouble you your spirits, which are more rather mine than yours? |
1666 | Why wilt thou not goe? |
1666 | Why wilt thou runne into destruction by meane of my feet? |
1666 | Why wouldst thou goe so willingly to hell? |
1666 | Will you blame his luxury? |
1666 | Will you bridle his love? |
1666 | Will you rob me? |
1666 | Yea verily( quoth I), why not? |
1666 | Yes( quoth shee) that he is, why doe you aske? |
1666 | You are his mother, and a kind woman, will you continually search out his dalliance? |
1666 | and why should you seeke the death of her, whom he doth fancie? |
1666 | and will you reprehend your owne art and delights in him? |
1666 | how faireth it with thee? |
1666 | seest thou not these sharpe and pointed flints which shall bruise and teare thee in peeces, if by adventure thou happen upon them? |
1666 | the usurper of my beauty, the Vicar of my name? |
1666 | thinkest thou we handle thee otherwise then thou deservest, which hast stollen away our Asse? |
1666 | what shall I do? |
1666 | whether shee be any of the Nymphs, of the number of the goddesses, of the company of the Muses, or of the mistery of the Graces? |
1666 | whither shall I go? |
1666 | why pull you your hory haires? |