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Word: ames (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

When asked how he felt about medical care in America, Crichton said, "I think we can all agree that Ame ican medicine, the way it is now, is not successful. But there's no evidence that the government can run anything. If you like the post office, you'll like socialized medicine...

Author: By Joan Feigenbaum, | Title: Crichton Speaks at Law Forum Preview of 'Coma' | 1/27/1978 | See Source »

...important or anything. It's not important. God knows why people are always asking me about this, because what do I know. It's like my old man once told me. Peter, he said, you take it as it comes. One day at a time. It's all the ame...

Author: By Peter Molyneaux, | Title: Christmas in Tahiti | 12/8/1975 | See Source »

...Fullerton. Skillfully integrating the poems and journal entries with his text, Lewis illumines both the depth and power of Wharton's feelings for Fullerton and her yearning to escape the solitude that afflicted her before she met him. Initially unsure of his reaction to her, Wharton writes: My poor 'ame close' barred its shutters and bolted its doors again, and the dust gathered and the cobwebs thickened in the empty rooms, where for a moment I had heard an echo. Later, "now deeply, helplessly in love," she finds her personality being "swept away" by his, and wonders with fright...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Through A Dusty Window | 11/20/1975 | See Source »

Works of Purcell, Ame, Schubert, Honegger, and Tohalkovaky; Cynthia Weinrich, Mezzo-soprano, and Priscilla Chapman, piano; Agassiz Living Room...

Author: By Joseph Streue, | Title: Classical | 5/23/1975 | See Source »

...political issues--Ives became something of a crank late in his life, sending plans for new governmental systems, but even before he developed these plans--Ives displayed a similar ambivalence of feeling. "Vote for Names! Names! Names!" he exclaimed during the 1912 election. "Three nice men Teddy, Woodrow & Bill $ame $ame $ame." But that didn't stop him from greeting Wilson as the savior of the proletariat the world over, the man who was going to maintain old-fashioned American democratic ideals and smash "the Hohenzollern Hog". That most first-hand observers...

Author: By Seth M. Kupferberg, | Title: A Salesman's Centennial | 10/24/1974 | See Source »

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