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"tuchuk "

Book 22. (1 results) Dancer of Gor (Individual Quote)

To be sure, I had been, upon occasion, given blankets or sheets to hold about myself, usually for warmth, and I had been, in my training, put in various costumes, mostly, I suppose, for my masters to see what I looked like in them, such as the common and Turian camisk, and the scandalous garb prescribed for Tuchuk slave girls. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 10, Sentence #516)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 516 To be sure, I had been, upon occasion, given blankets or sheets to hold about myself, usually for warmth, and I had been, in my training, put in various costumes, mostly, I suppose, for my masters to see what I looked like in them, such as the common and Turian camisk, and the scandalous garb prescribed for tuchuk slave girls.

Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
10 513 It was a brief slave tunic, slit deeply at the hips, with narrow shoulder straps, little more than strings.
10 514 I looked up at him, gratefully.
10 515 It was the first garment of my own I had been given on this world.
10 516 To be sure, I had been, upon occasion, given blankets or sheets to hold about myself, usually for warmth, and I had been, in my training, put in various costumes, mostly, I suppose, for my masters to see what I looked like in them, such as the common and Turian camisk, and the scandalous garb prescribed for tuchuk slave girls.
10 517 Too, I had been taught the wearing of, and arrangement of, simple, typical slave garments, such as tunics of various sorts, and ta-teeras, or slave rags.
10 518 I had even been taught the tying of slave girdles, in such a way as to emphasize, and sometimes more than subtly, my figure.
10 519 And, indeed, part of my training had not been only how to wear, and move in such garments, but also how to remove them provocatively, and gracefully.
It was a brief slave tunic, slit deeply at the hips, with narrow shoulder straps, little more than strings. I looked up at him, gratefully. It was the first garment of my own I had been given on this world. To be sure, I had been, upon occasion, given blankets or sheets to hold about myself, usually for warmth, and I had been, in my training, put in various costumes, mostly, I suppose, for my masters to see what I looked like in them, such as the common and Turian camisk, and the scandalous garb prescribed for tuchuk slave girls. Too, I had been taught the wearing of, and arrangement of, simple, typical slave garments, such as tunics of various sorts, and ta-teeras, or slave rags. I had even been taught the tying of slave girdles, in such a way as to emphasize, and sometimes more than subtly, my figure. And, indeed, part of my training had not been only how to wear, and move in such garments, but also how to remove them provocatively, and gracefully. - (Dancer of Gor, Chapter 10)