All 10 Uses of
infinite
in
Riders of the Purple Sage
- But in her it had infinitely more—a revelation of mortal spirit.†
Chpt 5 *
- Few as the words were, Jane knew how infinitely much they implied.†
Chpt 7
- He based it, not upon what the chances of life had made her, but upon the revelation of dark eyes that pierced the infinite, upon a few pitiful, halting words that betrayed failure and wrong and misery, yet breathed the truth of a tragic fate rather than a natural leaning to evil.†
Chpt 8
- But he did smile, and to the gentleness she had seen a few times he added something that was infinitely sad and sweet.†
Chpt 11
- In the evening he played with the child at an infinite variety of games she invented, and then, oftener than not, he accepted Jane's invitation to supper.†
Chpt 11
- He saw in them infinitely more than he saw in his dreams.†
Chpt 14
- And now Lassiter never advised it again, grew sadder and quieter in his contemplation of the child, and infinitely more gentle and loving.†
Chpt 15
- For Jane Withersteen the child was an answer to prayer, a blessing, a possession infinitely more precious than all she had lost.†
Chpt 19
- Blanched in moonlight, the sage yet seemed to hold its hue of purple and was infinitely more wild and lonely.†
Chpt 20
- Out of the east or north from remote distance, breathed an infinitely low, continuously long sound—deep, weird, detonating, thundering, deadening—dying.†
Chpt 22
Definition:
unlimited; without boundaries; or too numerous to count