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Word: 9th (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Though a vague ennui normally renders artfarts harmless, they will become fierce at any suggestion that their form of narrow scholarship is actually leisure. Most people would be hard pressed to find any practical value in studying "the representation of sexnality in 9th Century Monastic Poetry." But the artfart never misses an opportunity to mention how hard he or she is working, and what difficult, pressing work it is. Although most members of this species subscribe to near-socialistic liberalism, that doesn't stop them from leading a lifestyle prodigal enough to make Thorstein Veblen blush...

Author: By Benjamin J. Heller, | Title: A New Cambridge Taxonomy | 4/24/1993 | See Source »

After fingerprinting the suspect, Harvard police handed him over to the Roxbury police, in whose custody he spent the night of the 9th, Rooney said...

Author: By Andrew L. Wright, | Title: Suspect Arrested After Rash Of Car Thefts Near B-School | 3/26/1993 | See Source »

...regret that the Society of Arab Students has decided to go public with its complaint (see "SAS Request Treated Unfairly" in the Letters to the Editors, February 9th) about the small grant it received from the Harvard Foundation this past fall...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: An Abuse of Process | 2/10/1993 | See Source »

North of the Franco-German border, Charlemagne's bones rest in the gilded tomb of Aachen's cathedral. The community's 12-star flag flutters from public buildings in a town that was briefly, in the 9th century, the capital of a Holy Roman Empire that united Europe from Brittany to Bohemia. But today, as Germans' once overwhelming support for Maastricht ebbs, flower seller Barbel Krutt speaks for Aachen's townspeople: "You can send all the politicians to the moon: this treaty does not mean a thing to folks like...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In the Hands Of The People | 10/5/1992 | See Source »

...begin with, an important town; the Roman capital of what is now Catalunya was farther south, at Tarragona. But Barcelona began to gain significance after the Roman Empire collapsed and the invading Visigoths took over, and it became a capital in the 9th century A.D., when Charlemagne's heirs conquered the city port, threw out the Arabs who had taken charge of it as the northern extension of the Arab conquest of Spain, and then in effect turned it over to a Catalan strongman, Wilfred the Hairy, the semilegendary founder of the Catalan state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The City Homage To BARCELONA | 7/27/1992 | See Source »

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