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He was standing there all red-faced, screaming and waving his arms around. start learning
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He skidded to a stop and smiled right at me. start learning
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“Please,” said the manager, “somebody call the pound.” start learning
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And that dog came trotting over to me just like he had been doing it his whole life. start learning
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He was big, but skinny; you could see his ribs. start learning
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And there were bald patches all over him, places where he didn’t have any fur at all. start learning
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He smiled so big that it made him sneeze. start learning
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And I have to admit, he stank. start learning
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He was kind of limping like something was wrong with one of his legs. start learning
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Sometimes he reminded me of a turtle hiding inside its shell, in there thinking about things and not ever sticking his head out into the world. start learning
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Sometimes he reminded me of a turtle hiding inside its shell, in there thinking about things and not ever sticking his head out into the world. start learning
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I went to the trailer door and I hollered, “Winn-Dixie!” start learning
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Winn-Dixie’s ears shot up in the air and he grinned and sneezed, and then he came limping up the steps and into the trailer and put his head right in the preacher’s lap, right on top of a pile of papers. start learning
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Winn-Dixie’s ears shot up in the air and he grinned and sneezed, and then he came limping up the steps and into the trailer and put his head right in the preacher’s lap, right on top of a pile of papers. start learning
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Winn-Dixie’s ears shot up in the air and he grinned and sneezed, and then he came limping up the steps and into the trailer and put his head right in the preacher’s lap, right on top of a pile of papers. start learning
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He looked at his ribs and his matted-up fur and the places where he was bald. start learning
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He looked at his ribs and his matted-up fur and the places where he was bald. start learning
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He pulled back his lips and showed the preacher all of his crooked yellow teeth and wagged his tail and knocked some of the preacher’s papers off the table. start learning
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He was making him poke his head out of his shell. start learning
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“Well,” said the preacher, “he’s a stray if ever I’ve seen one.” start learning
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He put down his pencil and scratched Winn-Dixie behind the ears. start learning
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I used the garden hose and some baby shampoo. start learning
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He looked insulted and the whole time he didn’t show me his teeth or wag his tail once. start learning
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I nodded my head at him and went on talking. start learning
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Winn-Dixie twitched his ears and raised his eyebrows. start learning
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He was working on a sermon and kind of muttering to himself. start learning
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Winn-Dixie looked up at the preacher and kind of gave him a nudge with his nose. start learning
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“She had red hair and freckles.” start learning
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She could stick a tyre in the ground and grow a car.” start learning
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She could stick a tyre in the ground and grow a car.” start learning
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Winn-Dixie started chewing on his paw, and I tapped him on the head to make him stop. start learning
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Winn-Dixie started chewing on his paw, and I tapped him on the head to make him stop. start learning
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Winn-Dixie started chewing on his paw, and I tapped him on the head to make him stop. start learning
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She couldn’t make head nor tail of a piece of meat. start learning
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She couldn’t make head nor tail of a piece of meat. start learning
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She said it made her feel like a bug under a microscope.” start learning
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Winn-Dixie hopped off, too. start learning
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If me and the preacher went off and left him by himself in the trailer, he pulled all the cushions off the couch and all the toilet paper off the roll. start learning
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The other thing about the Open Arms that is different from other churches is there aren’t any pews. start learning
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“Arrruiiiiipppp,” wailed Winn-Dixie. start learning
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One minute everything was quiet and serious and the preacher was going on and on and on; the next minute Winn-Dixie looked like a furry bullet shooting across the building, chasing that mouse. start learning
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One minute everything was quiet and serious and the preacher was going on and on and on; the next minute Winn-Dixie looked like a furry bullet shooting across the building, chasing that mouse. start learning
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He was barking and his feet were skidding all over the polished Pick-It-Quick floor, and people were clapping and hollering and pointing. start learning
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Winn-Dixie stood up there in front of the whole church, wagging his tail and holding the mouse real careful in his mouth, holding on to him tight but not squishing him. start learning
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Winn-Dixie stood up there in front of the whole church, wagging his tail and holding the mouse real careful in his mouth, holding on to him tight but not squishing him. start learning
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Winn-Dixie stood up there in front of the whole church, wagging his tail and holding the mouse real careful in his mouth, holding on to him tight but not squishing him. start learning
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And there weren’t that many kids at the Open Arms, just Dunlap and Stevie Dewberry, two brothers who weren’t twins but looked like they were. start learning
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And Amanda Wilkinson, whose face was always pinched up like she was smelling something real bad; and Sweetie Pie Thomas, who was only five years old and still mostly a baby. start learning
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This is what happened: I was picking out my books and kind of humming to myself, and all of a sudden there was this loud and scary scream. start learning
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Chapter Seven “Back when Florida was wild, when it consisted of nothing but palmetto trees and mosquitoes so big they could fly away with you,” Miss Franny Block started in, “and I was just a little girl no bigger than you, my father, Herman W. start learning
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Chapter Seven “Back when Florida was wild, when it consisted of nothing but palmetto trees and mosquitoes so big they could fly away with you,” Miss Franny Block started in, “and I was just a little girl no bigger than you, my father, Herman W. start learning
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“I don’t want to appear prideful,” she said, “but my daddy was a very rich man. start learning
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She nodded and then leaned back and said, “And I was a little girl who loved to read. start learning
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I raised it up slowly and then I aimed it carefully and I threw it right at that bear and screamed, ‘Be gone!’ start learning
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Well, the men in town used to tease me about it. start learning
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And you could tell that he was proud of looking so good, proud of not looking like a stray. start learning
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I thought what he needed most was a collar and a leash, so I went into Gertrude’s Pets, where there were fish and snakes and mice and lizards and gerbils and pet supplies, and I found a real handsome red leather collar with a matching leash. start learning
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But I love this collar and leash, and so does my dog, and I was thinking that maybe you could set me up on an instalment plan.” start learning
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On the way out of Gertrude’s Pets, I said to Winn-Dixie, “You are better at making friends than anybody I have ever known. start learning
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I bet if my mama knew you, she would think you were the best dog ever.” start learning
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She was standing there, sucking on the knuckle of her third finger, staring in the window of Gertrude’s Pets. start learning
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She had her hair tied up in a ponytail with a pink ribbon. start learning
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She says if I’m real good, I might get to buy me a goldfish or one of them gerbils. start learning
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“The witch will eat that dog,” Stevie said. start learning
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I got off my bike and went up to the gate and hollered, “Winn-Dixie, you better come on out of there.” start learning
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“Get lost, you bald-headed babies,” I said. start learning
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“Get lost, you bald-headed babies,” I said. start learning
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I went around a really big tree all covered in moss, and there was Winn-Dixie. start learning
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She was old with crinkly brown skin. start learning
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“Go on and sit down,” she said, pointing at a lawn chair with the back all busted out of it. start learning
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“Like maybe you got her green thumb. start learning
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“Could be that you got more of your mama in you than just red hair and freckles and running fast.” start learning
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He had peanut butter in his whiskers, and he kept yawning and stretching. start learning
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He had peanut butter in his whiskers, and he kept yawning and stretching. start learning
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When I was done talking, the preacher kissed me good night, and then he leaned way over and gave Winn-Dixie a kiss, too, right on top of his head. start learning
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Winn-Dixie was already at the other end of the trailer, in the preacher’s room. start learning
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There were rabbits and hamsters and gerbils and mice and birds and lizards and snakes, and they were all just sitting there on the floor like they had turned to stone, and Otis was standing in the middle of them. start learning
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He walked over to the counter and started digging through a pile of things, and finally he came up with a broom. start learning
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“Did they escape from their cages?” start learning
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She stood there and sucked on her knuckle and stared at me. start learning
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That’s my mama on the porch. start learning
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Sometimes Sweetie Pie snuck in for the concert, too. start learning
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One time Stevie said to me, “My mama says you shouldn’t be spending all your time cooped up in that pet shop and at that library, sitting around talking with old ladies. start learning
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“Otis is not retarded,” I said. start learning
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“I think they are just trying to make friends with you in a roundabout way,” Gloria said. start learning
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Or I imitated Otis tapping his pointy-toed boots and playing for all the animals, and that always made her laugh. start learning
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Or I imitated Otis tapping his pointy-toed boots and playing for all the animals, and that always made her laugh. start learning
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Or I imitated Otis tapping his pointy-toed boots and playing for all the animals, and that always made her laugh. start learning
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There were whiskey bottles and beer bottles and wine bottles all tied on with string, and some of them were clanking against each other and making a spooky kind of noise. start learning
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Me and Winn-Dixie stood and stared at the tree, and the hair on top of his head rose up a little bit and he growled deep in his throat. start learning
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“And them Dewberry boys, you try not to judge them too harsh either, all right?” start learning
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Winn-Dixie nudged me with his wet nose and wagged his tail; when he saw I wasn’t going, he trotted after Gloria. start learning
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I wondered if my mama, wherever she was, had a tree full of bottles; and I wondered if I was a ghost to her, the same way she sometimes seemed like a ghost to me. start learning
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I worried about him hogging the fan, and I worried about the fan blowing him bald; but Miss Franny said not to worry about either thing, that Winn-Dixie could hog the fan if he wanted and she had never in her life seen a dog made bald by a fan. start learning
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I worried about him hogging the fan, and I worried about the fan blowing him bald; but Miss Franny said not to worry about either thing, that Winn-Dixie could hog the fan if he wanted and she had never in her life seen a dog made bald by a fan. start learning
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I worried about him hogging the fan, and I worried about the fan blowing him bald; but Miss Franny said not to worry about either thing, that Winn-Dixie could hog the fan if he wanted and she had never in her life seen a dog made bald by a fan. start learning
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And when Miss Franny stopped shaking and started talking again, Winn-Dixie would lick her hand and lie back down in front of the fan. start learning
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Whenever Miss Franny had one of her fits, it reminded me of Winn-Dixie in a thunderstorm. start learning
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And I got real good at holding on to Winn-Dixie whenever they came. start learning
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Winn-Dixie yawned real big and lay down on his side with a thump and a sigh. start learning
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Block was just a boy when the firing on Fort Sumter occurred,” Miss Franny Block said as she started in on her story. start learning
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“Hell is a cuss word,” said Amanda. start learning
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And he was covered with all manner of vermin: fleas and lice. start learning
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And he was covered with all manner of vermin: fleas and lice. start learning
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And he was covered with all manner of vermin: fleas and lice. start learning
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And the only thing that made Littmus forget that he was hungry and itchy and hot or cold was that he was getting shot at. start learning
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When he finally finished crying, he had the strangest sensation. start learning
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“Sorrow,” Miss Franny said. start learning
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She leaned back in her chair and crossed her hands on her stomach. start learning
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“It has a peculiar flavour...” “Root beer?” start learning
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He was hunching up his shoulders and lowering his chin and getting ready to pull his head inside his shell. start learning
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“It tastes sad,” he said, and sighed. start learning
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But he calls Gloria Dump a witch all the time, and he calls Otis retarded. start learning
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“Other people’s tragedies should not be the subject of idle conversation. start learning
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He patted Winn-Dixie on the head and got up and turned off the light and closed the door. start learning
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“Gertrude,” Gertrude squawked. start learning
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She picked up the Littmus Lozenge wrapper in her beak and then dropped it and looked around. start learning
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“It was on account of the music,” he said. start learning
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Gloria wiped her eyes with the hem of her dress. start learning
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“That’s why Amanda is so pinch-faced,” I said. start learning
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Winn-Dixie’s head shot up from underneath Gloria’s chair. start learning
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She stuck her knuckle in her mouth and then pulled it back out. start learning
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She wrapped her arms around Winn-Dixie and squeezed him so hard that his eyes almost popped out of his head. start learning
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Chapter Twenty-One After I got Otis convinced to come, the rest of getting ready for the party was easy and fun. start learning
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We cut them up in triangles and cut off the crusts and put little toothpicks with frilly tops in them. start learning
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We cut them up in triangles and cut off the crusts and put little toothpicks with frilly tops in them. start learning
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We cut them up in triangles and cut off the crusts and put little toothpicks with frilly tops in them. start learning
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She was wearing a pretty green dress that was all shiny and shimmery. start learning
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Even when she was standing still, she still kind of swayed, like she was standing on a boat. start learning
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Even when she was standing still, she still kind of swayed, like she was standing on a boat. start learning
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And the whole time Winn-Dixie was standing right in the middle of everybody, wagging his tail so hard that I thought for sure he would knock Miss Franny right off her high heels. start learning
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“Otis,” I hollered at him over the rain, “come on, we’re going inside.” start learning
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She waved around her wad of magazine pages. start learning
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And then he whistled loud and long. start learning
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It was mostly a drizzle now. start learning
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And after I convinced these Dewberry boys that I ain’t no scary witch all full of spells and potions—” “She ain’t no witch,” Stevie said. start learning
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If she was, she would’ve turned us into toads by now.” start learning
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And if he don’t know it, he can pick it up right quick if you hum it to him. start learning
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So we looked around, wondering who did, thinking that maybe we got us a burglar in the house. start learning
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“You hum it,” said Miss Franny, nodding her head, “and he can play it.” start learning
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I went up on the porch and took hold of her hand and pulled on her. start learning
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I cannot speak to the soporific powers of pickle juice, but I do know about the comforting power of words. start learning
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Because of Winn-Dixie was my first book, and suddenly I was on the receiving end of a tremendous – an astonishing, an overwhelming – amount of love. start learning
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The Dewberry boys use a derogatory word about Otis and another derogatory word about Gloria Dump. start learning
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