Slept
in sentence
358 examples of Slept in a sentence
His wife had
slept
there.
His wife had
slept
there!
When he found himself in shelter, in this profound calm of the earth, seized by satiety of violence, he had
slept
for two days the sleep of a brute, gorged and overcome; and the depression continued, he lived in a bruised state with bitter mouth and aching head, as after some tremendous spree.
The latter
slept
with Jeanlin, at the risk of being arrested, seized by such horror at the idea of going back to the darkness of Réquillart that he would have preferred a prison.
A shudder shook him, the horror of the night after all those deaths, an unacknowledged fear of the little soldier who
slept
down there underneath the rocks.
Father Bonnemort occupied the former bed of the two youngsters, who
slept
with Catherine now that poor Alzire no longer dug her hump into her big sister's ribs.
All were asleep, but they had to cross the narrow passage where the mother
slept.
His meals were sent down to him, and he sometimes
slept
for a couple of hours on a truss of straw, rolled in a cloak.
All his struggles came back to his memory confusedly, that useless fight against the poison which
slept
in his muscles, the slowly accumulated alcohol of his race.
The night before, on leaving the hospital, he had
slept
at the Bon-Joyeux, Widow Désir's.
You remember they said I
slept
with you.
Nobody ate, nobody
slept.
A seaman couldn't be wrong on this topic, and I told the Canadian what had gone on while he
slept.
I was left to myself; I went to bed but
slept
pretty poorly.
That night I
slept
poorly, and between my fitful dreams, I thought I heard a distant moaning, like a funeral dirge.
I
slept
pretty poorly.
Those two inseparable companions had
slept
serenely, utterly unaware of the Nautilus's feat.
He was a youth of even temperament, who played in playtime, worked in school-hours, was attentive in class,
slept
well in the dormitory, and ate well in the refectory.
He had lived at court and
slept
in the bed of queens!
she went on, speaking to herself, "the table that comes in so handy for folding the washing, and on which, in the hunting season, I have
slept
six visitors!
Chapter TwoEmma got out first, then Felicite, Monsieur Lheureux, and a nurse, and they had to wake up Charles in his corner, where he had
slept
soundly since night set in.
This was the fourth time that she had
slept
in a strange place.
As to the chemist's spouse, she was the best wife in Normandy, gentle as a sheep, loving her children, her father, her mother, her cousins, weeping for other's woes, letting everything go in her household, and detesting corsets; but so slow of movement, such a bore to listen to, so common in appearance, and of such restricted conversation, that although she was thirty, he only twenty, although they
slept
in rooms next each other and he spoke to her daily, he never thought that she might be a woman for another, or that she possessed anything else of her sex than the gown.
At this hour Rodolphe still
slept.
The next day when he was up (at about two o'clock—he had
slept
late), Rodolphe had a basket of apricots picked.
Rodolphe, who, to distract himself, had been rambling about the wood all day, was sleeping quietly in his chateau, and Leon, down yonder, always
slept.
Fortunately they moved into the room in which the children
slept.
The disorder of his hair and clothes showed that he had not
slept.
He prowled round the house to see what was afoot everywhere, especially on the fourth floor, where the servants
slept.
Julien had
slept
well, he was quite calm, and felt no other sentiment than one of philosophical piety towards this crowd of envious persons who, without cruelty, were ready to applaud his sentence of death.
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