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Believe me, you are quite unjust to me.
— from An Ideal Husband by Oscar Wilde
“You are quite unintelligible to me, but I am fully at your service.
— from My Lady Nobody: A Novel by Maarten Maartens
How many men have brilliant schemes and yet are quite unable to execute them, and through their very brilliancy stumble unawares upon ruin?
— from Success (Second Edition) by Beaverbrook, Max Aitken, Baron
For a number of pages you are quite unable to tell whether this is a ghost or a legend or a foreboding or simply old-fashioned dreams that are being allusively placed before you.
— from Boon, The Mind of the Race, The Wild Asses of the Devil, and The Last Trump; Being a First Selection from the Literary Remains of George Boon, Appropriate to the Times by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
I tried to save you, and came to see you before I thought that you might—and, indeed, you are quite unlike the people whom you call your relations.
— from Uarda : a Romance of Ancient Egypt — Complete by Georg Ebers
“Why, Breck,” teased Mr. Wing, “I believe you are quite used to having announcements of this kind made about you.
— from The Camp Fire Girls on a Yacht by Margaret Love Sanderson
Norman, who was very young, and quite unaccustomed to having a tiger so near him with no iron cage between them, looked as though he had not enjoyed the sight at all.
— from The Children's Tabernacle; Or, Hand-Work and Heart-Work by A. L. O. E.
You are quite useless, they say,”—the baron eyed Lory with a calm and experienced glance as he spoke—“so they release you on parole.
— from The Isle of Unrest by Henry Seton Merriman
“Then you are quite unable to account for death?”
— from The Bond of Black by William Le Queux
"You are quite unstrung to-night, Julian," Valentine said.
— from Flames by Robert Hichens
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