Word: apartness
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...already looking, thinking about where he’s standing,” he says. “How close to the plate he is, where his hands are, what kind of stride he has, just taking mental notes. I try to pick him apart, and when a pitcher puts it where you want it—I mean, all you have to do is put it there, and I’m going to call a good game...
...process of blocking wasn’t easy for them as original groupings disintegrated and new ones formed to take their place. Duncan said she was forced to find new blockmates after her first blocking group fell apart, leaving just her and one other friend...
...there in Albany came a less dramatic, but no less essential, kind of scoring. In last Saturday’s ECAC Championship against Clarkson, Harvard fell behind 2-0 after the first period on goals from Chris Blight and Tristan Lush that were less than a minute apart. Trailing by two goals, an unlikely catalyst emerged for the Crimson...
...report cites a deterioration of the relationship between the United States and Europe—one that it says was exacerbated, but not caused, by the war in Iraq—as a critical reason to address the issues pushing the allies apart...
...easy thing to do. Each year, up to 8,000 donors in the U.S. may leave their bodies to science, and while most people like to think of their mortal remains being gently dissected by respectful medical students, the fact is that cadavers might just as easily be sawed apart and scattered to pharmaceutical companies and biotech firms, or even used as flesh-and-blood crash-test dummies. The only hard rule, by federal law, is that under no circumstances may anyone profit from the transaction. The exception to that rule, however, is that the people handling, storing and processing...