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Usage examples of "juste".

Il se trouva avoir raisonne juste pour les poursuites, mais non pour Corysandre.

Singai and Juste, astride their dyre, raced across the turf in the direction of ReiDalgo.

He scrambled astride the waiting dyre, settling Coventry onto his lap just as Juste came abreast.

Il est vrai que je ne sais pas au juste a quoi elle pensait en lisant le Merite des Femmes.

Loran stood guard while the other four, Singai, Rainon, Juste and Modoc, sat to direct their minds on a mission of discovery.

Tiern, trailed by Juste, Singai, and Loran, followed Modoc as he moved silently along.

Loran crept across the opening to follow Modoc, while Juste and Singai shadowed Tiern.

Glancing further back, Tiern saw that Juste, Loran and Modoc, too, were cloaking themselves behind the fluctuating protection of their auras.

Juste, Singai and Modoc spoke together for a time, and then began to collect the bodies of their enemies, placing them near the base of the stone wall.

Balar excused himself to return to his duties and Singai, Modoc, and Juste took themselves off, intent upon whatever personal tasks demanded their attention.

To her surprise he had greeted Juste, Modoc and Rainon by name, grasping their forearms in a masculine handshake accompanied by an earnest bright-eyed gaze that Coventry was unable to decipher.

Don Juste Lopez had had half his beard singed off at the muzzle of a trabuco loaded with slugs, of which every one missed him, providentially.

Juste Judex ultionis, Righteous Judge of retribution, donum fac remissionis grant the gift of absolution ante diem rationis.

Ne ther was holden no disconfitynge But as a justes or a tourneiynge, For soothly ther was no disconfiture- For fallyng nys nat but an aventure- Ne to be lad by force unto the stake Unyolden, and with twenty knyghtes take, O persone allone, withouten mo, And haryed forth by arme, foot, and too, And eke his steede dryven forth with staves, With footmen, bothe yemen and eek knaves, It nas aretted hym no vileynye, Ther may no man clepen it cowardye.

That, or its French equivalent, was the word which would have leaped to the mind of the stylist Flaubert, always so careful in his search for the mot juste.