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"kur "

Book 33. (1 results) Rebels of Gor (Individual Quote)

Any Kur can instantly tell a male human from a female human, in virtue of the radical sexual dimorphism characterizing the human species. - (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 49, Sentence #86)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
49 86 Any kur can instantly tell a male human from a female human, in virtue of the radical sexual dimorphism characterizing the human species.

Book 33. (7 results) Rebels of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
49 83 I recalled that on the steel world of Agamemnon, I had often, at first, confused one kur with another.
49 84 Indeed, it had been difficult for me, at first, to distinguish a male kur from a female kur, a difficulty which would be incomprehensible amongst kurii themselves.
49 85 It might be mentioned, in passing, that no similar difficulty occurs amongst kurii where humans are concerned.
49 86 Any kur can instantly tell a male human from a female human, in virtue of the radical sexual dimorphism characterizing the human species.
49 87 After putting the outer garments of the Ashigaru to one side, together with the knife, a tanto, which I had removed from his sash, his only weapon, I used some of the strips of cloth torn from the coverlet, and fastened his ankles together, and then his wrists, behind him.
49 88 I then, with more of the same materials, gagged him.
49 89 Coming about the screen, the knife, and outer garments, of the Ashigaru in hand, I encountered the slave, still in bara, as she had not been given permission to break position.
I recalled that on the steel world of Agamemnon, I had often, at first, confused one kur with another. Indeed, it had been difficult for me, at first, to distinguish a male kur from a female kur, a difficulty which would be incomprehensible amongst kurii themselves. It might be mentioned, in passing, that no similar difficulty occurs amongst kurii where humans are concerned. Any kur can instantly tell a male human from a female human, in virtue of the radical sexual dimorphism characterizing the human species. After putting the outer garments of the Ashigaru to one side, together with the knife, a tanto, which I had removed from his sash, his only weapon, I used some of the strips of cloth torn from the coverlet, and fastened his ankles together, and then his wrists, behind him. I then, with more of the same materials, gagged him. Coming about the screen, the knife, and outer garments, of the Ashigaru in hand, I encountered the slave, still in bara, as she had not been given permission to break position. - (Rebels of Gor, Chapter 49)