This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
41911 | Dispense with the ambulance? 41911 Have you got a pass?" |
41911 | Will you and your men see to it? 41911 (_ b_) If due to one of these causes, to what specific conditions do the Board attribute it? 41911 (_ b_) Misconduct? 41911 (_ b_) On field service? 41911 (_ b_) Where? 41911 (_ c_) On duty? 41911 (_ c_) Opinion? 41911 (_ d_) Off duty? 41911 And shall this man dictate to us? 41911 Are n''t we picking folks up just as fast as they fall? 41911 As regards the first question: is a man, for example, who has lost an eye permanently invalided? 41911 Do the Board recommend--(_ a_) Discharge as permanently unfit, or(_ b_) Change to England? 41911 Do you recommend--(_ a_) Discharge as permanently unfit, or(_ b_) Change to England? 41911 Does not the necessity for the foregoing criticism indicate our utter unpreparedness? 41911 Has the disability been aggravated by--(_ a_) Intemperance? 41911 If an operation was advised and declined, was the refusal unreasonable? 41911 If not permanent, what is its probable minimum duration? 41911 If not, was an operation advised and declined? 41911 If so, what? 41911 If so--(_a_) When? 41911 If the disability is an injury, was it caused--(_ a_) In action? 41911 In other words, why not give a healthy and reasonable alternative? 41911 Is he fit for base duty in Egypt, or must he be sent home? 41911 Is it not clear that chefs, laundrymen, skilled carpenters, and other tradesmen are also required? 41911 Is the disability permanent? 41911 Looking back, does it not seem essential that these hospitals should have been formed, at all events in outline, in time of peace? 41911 Shall he? 41911 To what extent is his capacity for earning a full livelihood in the general labour market lessened at present? 41911 Was a Court of Inquiry held on the injury? 41911 Was an operation performed? 41911 What does it matter so long as the patient receives the articles? 41911 What is his present condition? 41911 What was to be done with malingerers, of whom there was a small but sufficiently numerous percentage? 41911 Where was he to be sent to? 41911 Who was to be permanently invalided, and how was the determination to be reached? 41911 Who was to be sent away temporarily, and for how long was he to go? 41911 Why should people of sense stop to put up a fence While their ambulance works in the valley? |
41911 | Would it not have been much better to amalgamate the two branches and administer the Red Cross in Egypt as a whole? |
41911 | _ Fence or Ambulance?_ Some critics have objected to the Red Cross assisting Soldiers''Clubs. |
41911 | _ In case of loss or decay of teeth._ Is the loss of teeth the result of wounds, injury, or disease, directly[6] attributable to active service? |
58233 | After we go there,asked one of the older officers,"what is the easiest way out?" |
58233 | Am I seasick? |
58233 | An''yours? |
58233 | Are you wounded? |
58233 | But just after I had examined him Thompson stepped up familiarly to me and said:''Do you really think, Smith, that So- and- so did have a pain?'' 58233 Compree"is another sample of broken-- one could not say Anglicized-- French, and it is employed with the signification,"do you understand?" |
58233 | Dear old Kelly,I said, as I pressed his cold hand,"what have I to forgive? |
58233 | Do n''t you think, Kelly,I asked seriously,"that lying in a shellhole like this is rather an undignified position for two proud Anglo- Saxons?" |
58233 | Do ye mane, sor, anatomically, or jayographically? |
58233 | Do you carry much of your artillery on your person? |
58233 | Do you dodge when you hear a shell coming, Kelly? |
58233 | Does it sound like something that a young woman would claim were it untrue? |
58233 | Have swallows a sense of humor, Kelly? |
58233 | Have they a sinse of humor? 58233 How about_ thinking_ it?" |
58233 | How are you, doctor? 58233 How do you know that I am not going to report you to the police?" |
58233 | How long since you have swallowed any food, Jones? |
58233 | Might I be curious enough to ask why a young woman like yourself should be traveling in Spain in times like the present? |
58233 | To move out? 58233 W- were you t- t- tight?" |
58233 | Well, Jones, and what is it this time? |
58233 | Well, Jones, what is the trouble this time? |
58233 | Well, Kelly,I demanded,"of what are you dreaming?" |
58233 | What about liberty as opposed to this cursed German militarism? |
58233 | What are you trying to do? 58233 What da hell do ye tink I''m doin''dis for? |
58233 | What''s doing this time, Jones? 58233 What''s yer name?" |
58233 | Where have you been hit, Kelly? |
58233 | Who said Oi was married? |
58233 | Who took Vimy Ridge, Kelly? |
58233 | Why do you tell a stranger like myself this story? |
58233 | Will ye talk to thim sometimes of Kelly? 58233 You going on leave, too?" |
58233 | ''Damn you, Thompson,''I replied,''what right have you to ask me such a question?'' |
58233 | ''Hello, Brown,''says de oder,''wot- a- hell''s wrong wid yez?'' |
58233 | ''Oh, come now, Smith, really, do you think he_ did_ have a pain?'' |
58233 | Ai n''t the Russhin, an''the Prushin, an''the Frinch, an''the Eyetalian, an''aven the Turk in this foight? |
58233 | An''Oi''ve hated the Englishman all me loife----""What the devil did you come out here for anyway, Kelly?" |
58233 | An''de first answers:''Ye know dat purty little Missus Smit wot lives behind de Lion an''Dragon whose husban''s gone to de front? |
58233 | An''fer whoy? |
58233 | An''they have somethin''to foight fer, whoile Oi''d like to ask ye what has a poor divil loike me to foight fer? |
58233 | Are you seasick?" |
58233 | Blank?" |
58233 | But was it the end of the voyage? |
58233 | But, docthor,"looking at me imploringly,"ye forgive me now, do n''t ye, fer it was on''y taisin''Oi was?" |
58233 | Ca n''t swallow again?" |
58233 | Cawnt you see it, you priceless old things?" |
58233 | Could he be blamed? |
58233 | Did n''t ye see those two Brass Hats goin''along the trenches just now?" |
58233 | Do n''t you know that this is an''in''trench?" |
58233 | Do you wonder that the men made jokes? |
58233 | Do you?" |
58233 | For notting?" |
58233 | Forgetting I was only a Captain, and stalking angrily in, I demanded:--"Where the hell is the--steenth Battalion?" |
58233 | Get your bally head blown off?" |
58233 | Had n''t we better turn back?" |
58233 | He heard a voice hissing:"Who goes there?" |
58233 | I wonder does he talk in his sleep? |
58233 | Is the war changing from the old trench warfare of the past three years into open warfare of the past century? |
58233 | Is there any just raisin whoy an Oirishman should n''t butt in, too?" |
58233 | It was hard, dirty and dangerous work, but bantering voices reached us:"What did you do in the great war, papa?" |
58233 | Misery? |
58233 | Naw? |
58233 | The question was:--"Say, Kelly, what the h---- will all the lice do for a living after the war?" |
58233 | Two men are overheard at the following conversation:"Say, Bill, what are you goin''to tell the croaker?" |
58233 | W''ere''d you come from in old England?" |
58233 | We throw down a glare from a flashlight, and a Tommy''s voice angrily cries:"''Ave a''eart there, myte; d''ye think ye''re the only man in the army? |
58233 | We were going along Caron d''Aix trench when I heard an angry voice behind me demanding:"Doctor, what are you doing in this trench? |
58233 | Were they not paying to be there, and should not that fact have given them some rights over those horrid rules of discipline? |
58233 | What the''ell''s yer name?" |
58233 | When one has inadvertently filtered through, as in this case, can those in the lines be blamed for talking about foolkillers? |
58233 | Who has not felt the benefit of a good laugh? |
58233 | Who has not seen a well- developed sense of humor save a difficult situation, or at least alleviate it? |
58233 | Who''d support moy childer if Oi was kilt?" |
58233 | Will ye do me a favor, docthor, boy?" |
58233 | Would n''t he do yer heart good?" |
58233 | Would n''t you like to take an ounce of it, sir?" |
58233 | Would you kindly divest yourself of your clothes till I examine the shoulder?" |
58233 | _ Mais, que voulez vous?_ as the French say with that delightful shrug. |
58233 | or, in slang- Canadian,"do you get me, Steve?" |
58233 | with the hope of receiving a few hours or days of rest at the transport or in the hospital? |