Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
At the very word "happy dust" four other inspectors closed in.
"You know what they do to you for happy dust around here?
"I do not mean any 'two kilos of happy dust'!
He offers her "happy dust", and though she refuses, he forces it on her.
"You mean those two kilograms of happy dust.
There never were any two kilos of happy dust; I was just having my little joke with that stuffy inspector.
It could be just a front, and instead of gold, their vault is jammed with kilos of happy dust.
Of course, happy dust doesn't matter to us Marsmen.
And if you have long, shag-rug threads, then you have some especially happy dust mites.
He attempts to give her some "happy dust" despite her claims that she's given up drugs, but Porgy grabs his arm and scares him off.
"Two kilos of happy dust!
It was the bag the inspector had been just about to search when Clark had pulled that silly stunt about "happy dust."
"He's had only five milligrams, and for a long-time happy dust addict that's barely enough to make him tempery.
Even the little wingety fairies are bloodthirsty if they sniff happy dust.)
Not happy dust, I hope?'
Sportin' Life waltzes around selling "happy dust", but soon incurs the wrath of Maria, who threatens him.
The one-time "Girl of the Nile," says Karsner, liked heavy drinking and "Happy Dust."
And so it went for nearly two hours, Ms. Richie scribbling her signature and sprinkling happy dust while unabashedly giddy fans fawned all over her.
Other motifs represent objects (such as the sleazy chromatic 'Happy Dust' motif) or places, notably Catfish Row.
Sportin' Life gives her a dose of Happy Dust and offers to take her with him when he goes to New York, but she rejects him.
She regains her strength and rushes inside, slamming the door on his face, but he leaves a packet of Happy Dust on her doorstep, and settles down to wait.
Not the people so much, but Venus itself is lethal-and there is always a chance of encountering a Venerian who has gotten hold of a grain of happy dust.
The devils in their mist either taunt, like vicious Crown (toweringly portrayed by Gregg Baker), or tempt, like Sportin' Life with his packets of "happy dust."
Crown, a strong and brutal stevedore storms in with his woman, Bess, and buys cheap whiskey and some "Happy Dust" off the local dope peddler Sportin' Life.
Clark's ploy is taken from a real-life incident, related in Heinlein's Tramp Royale, in which his wife answers the same question with "heroin" substituted for the fictitious, but equally illegal, happy dust.