Book 31. (1 results) Conspirators of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
1402
In my case, it would not be merely the brand, the garmenture, the collar, the closely knit society, and such, but the very Gorean I had been taught was quite possibly a slave Gorean, subtly different in certain ways from the Gorean spoken by the free.
In my case, it would not be merely the brand, the garmenture, the collar, the closely knit society, and such, but the very Gorean I had been taught was quite possibly a slave Gorean, subtly different in certain ways from the Gorean spoken by the free.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8, Sentence #1402)
Book 31. (7 results) Conspirators of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
8
1399
Did he have such confidence in me, that I would not try to run away? To be sure, I would have been afraid to run away.
8
1400
The instructresses had well impressed on me, in the house, that there was no escape for the Gorean slave girl, barbarian or not.
8
1401
There was nowhere to turn, nowhere to run.
8
1402
In my case, it would not be merely the brand, the garmenture, the collar, the closely knit society, and such, but the very Gorean I had been taught was quite possibly a slave Gorean, subtly different in certain ways from the Gorean spoken by the free.
8
1403
In this respect a Gorean woman enslaved had an advantage over me.
8
1404
But, just as there were barbarian accents, aside from deliberately inserted, betraying subtleties, even the enslaved Gorean girls would usually have an accent different from that of their masters.
8
1405
I recalled that the girl from Tabor, the island, had had a different accent.
Did he have such confidence in me, that I would not try to run away? To be sure, I would have been afraid to run away.
The instructresses had well impressed on me, in the house, that there was no escape for the Gorean slave girl, barbarian or not.
There was nowhere to turn, nowhere to run.
In my case, it would not be merely the brand, the garmenture, the collar, the closely knit society, and such, but the very Gorean I had been taught was quite possibly a slave Gorean, subtly different in certain ways from the Gorean spoken by the free.
In this respect a Gorean woman enslaved had an advantage over me.
But, just as there were barbarian accents, aside from deliberately inserted, betraying subtleties, even the enslaved Gorean girls would usually have an accent different from that of their masters.
I recalled that the girl from Tabor, the island, had had a different accent.
- (Conspirators of Gor, Chapter 8)