All 9 Uses
rendezvous
in
Madame Bovary
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- So the next day they talked over how to arrange their rendezvous.†
Chpt 2.10 *
- "That will pass over," he concluded; "it's a whim:" And he missed three rendezvous running.†
Chpt 2.10
- And he at once took down from the shelf Emma's boots, all coated with mud, the mud of the rendezvous, that crumbled into powder beneath his fingers, and that he watched as it gently rose in a ray of sunlight.†
Chpt 2.12
- Perhaps he no longer remembered his suppers with girls after masked balls; and no doubt she did not recollect the rendezvous of old when she ran across the fields in the morning to her lover's house.†
Chpt 3.1
- In the evening Emma wrote the clerk an interminable letter, in which she cancelled the rendezvous; all was over; they must not, for the sake of their happiness, meet again.†
Chpt 3.1
- The young man was irritated at this bigot fancy; then he nevertheless experienced a certain charm in seeing her, in the middle of a rendezvous, thus lost in her devotions, like an Andalusian marchioness; then he grew bored, for she seemed never coming to an end.†
Chpt 3.1
- It was Justin who had inspired her with this whim, by begging her to take him into her service as valet-de-chambre*, and if the privation of it did not lessen the pleasure of her arrival at each rendezvous, it certainly augmented the bitterness of the return.†
Chpt 3.5
- Then she looked at the bank-notes, and dreaming of the unlimited number of rendezvous represented by those two thousand francs, she stammered— "What!†
Chpt 3.5
- This failing to keep their rendezvous seemed to her an insult, and she tried to rake up other reasons to separate herself from him.†
Chpt 3.6
Definitions:
-
(1)
(rendezvous) to meet at a specific time and place; or the meeting itself
- (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)