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Word: absurd (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...controls normal to legitimate business." To newsmen, Toulmin described Tucker as "a tall, dark, delightful, but inexperienced boy." He added that the Tucker 48 does not actually run, it just goes "chug-chug." Furthermore, "I don't know if it can back up." To all this Tucker snapped: "Absurd. I am surprised at the man." He explained that he had asked Toulmin to resign "to make way for a prominent man now active in the automobile industry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Chug-Chug | 9/29/1947 | See Source »

...Creole trimmings, grows up with a gorilla for a playmate; her first word, at seven months, is "man." She marries the governor of Havana, then becomes a slave trader, millionaire racehorse owner, inventor of the cigaret and, after the first 100 pages, dull to read about. Merely exaggerating the absurd is no sure way to hilarity; satire must make its own kind of sense and this makes little or none. Readers will admire Ruark's choice of target but deplore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Bad Throw | 9/29/1947 | See Source »

Star-Times Publisher Elzey Roberts countered with a defiant open letter to officious, slowfooted Dickmann. It was absurd, Roberts said, to make it "legal to listen to such news [by radio] and illegal to read it" in a paper. In Washington, Dickmann's fellow St. Louisan and political sponsor, Postmaster General Robert Hannegan, agreed with Publisher Roberts, and ruled that the law didn't literally mean what it said. Henceforth "incidental reporting of a lottery" will not bar a paper from the mails...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Now It Can Be Told | 9/22/1947 | See Source »

Some doctors disagreed. Cried a Ministry of Public Health spokesman: "Absurd! . . . The worst that could have resulted was a case of diarrhea and an irritated rectum." But Detective Bascou was so sure of his ground that he closed his investigation as a police problem and recommended that a medical commission carry on. Solution of the Mâcon "murders" was now up to the doctors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Puzzle of the 17 Patients | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

...parents to regard God as perfect 'substance.' In later life she realized that this had actually led her to think of Him as something like a vast tapioca pudding. (To make matters worse, she disliked tapioca.) We may feel ourselves quite safe from this degree of absurdity, but we are mistaken. If a man watches his own mind, I believe he will find that what profess to be specially advanced or philosophic conceptions of God are, in his thinking, always accompanied by vague images which, if inspected, would turn out to be even more absurd than the manlike...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Don v. Devil | 9/8/1947 | See Source »

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