h he read something so terrible,
rude and replusive that he could not finish.
Selenin (21 times)
Selinin (1 time), changed to Selenin from original sentence (Part 3,
Ch. VIII, Pg. 311):
There was no news there, so he drove back to his hotel, and
wrote at once to the lawyer and to Selinin concerning it.
Silenin (3 times), changed to Selenin from original sentences (Part 2,
Ch. XII, Pg. 239 and Part 3, Ch. VII, Pg. 310):
"Is the associate's name Silenin?" he asked the lawyer.
He tore open the envelope, and, seeing a letter from Silenin
with some official document, he felt the blood mounting to
his cheeks, and his heart grow weak.
"Dear friend," wrote Silenin, "our last conversation made a
strong impression upon me."
Shouleds was changed to shoulders from the original sentence (Part 2,
Ch. XVI, Pg. 252):
In the box he found Mariette and a strange lady with a red
mantle over her shouleds and high head-dress, and two men--a
general, Mariette's husband, a handsome, tall man with a
high, artificial, military breast, and a flaxen haired,
bald-headed man with shaved chin and solemn side-whiskers.
Simonson (31 times)
Simsonson (1 time), changed to Simonson from the original sentence
(Part 3, Ch. VII, Pg. 304):
I never thought that Vladimir Simsonson could fall in love in
such a very stupid, childish fashion.
Smelkoff (34 times)
Smeldoff (1 time), changed to Smelkoff from the original sentence
(Part 1, Ch. XI, Pg. 39):
"You are charged, together with Euphemia Bochkova and
Katherine Maslova, with stealing from the trunk of the
merchant Smeldoff money belonging to him, and subsequently
brought arsenic and induced Maslova to administer it to
Smelkoff, by reason of which he came to his death."
Smothly changed to smoothly from the original sentence
(Part 1, Ch. LIII, Pg. 183):
At first everything went on smothly, but afterward one of
the party was caught, the papers were seized, and then all
were taken in a police drag-net.
Tarass (7 times)
Taras (1 time), changed to Tarass from original sentence (Part 3,
Ch. 1, Pg. 290):
Her condition in this respect was somewhat relieved by the
presence of Theodosia and Taras, who, learning that his wife
was subjected to these insults, had himself included among
the prisoners, and riding as such from Nijhni,
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