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Word: arabism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...There's no way to afford phone calls to my friends," says Zimran D. Ahmed '98, who e-mails his high school friends from Dubai college in the United Arab Emirates several times a week...

Author: By H. NICOLE Lee, | Title: International Students Say The Internet Helps Them Save Money on Calls Home | 2/6/1995 | See Source »

TIME: What was your reaction to the Beit Lid bombing? SHKAKI: This was the biggest military attack ever inside Palestine [outside the Arab-Israeli wars]. TIME: It seems to give you satisfaction? SHKAKI: It gives satisfaction to our people...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERVIEW WITH A FANATIC | 2/6/1995 | See Source »

What remained of that mindless optimism-inflation had already eroded it badly-was exploded by the Arab oil embargo and energy crisis of 1973. Almost overnight, opinion swung to the blackest pessimism: the industrial West would be permanently crippled by oil shortages, while Middle Eastern sheiks and emirs raked in -well, just about all the money in the world. One economist, who has since become one of the most respected and powerful in the country, prophesied that in a few years motorists on the New Jersey Turnpike would see oil refineries adorned with signs written in Arabic and pictures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FORTY YEARS OF NONSENSE | 1/30/1995 | See Source »

Morocco meant both these things. "This people is wholly antique," he wrote in Tangier; its Arab men and Jewish women -- Arab women were not paintable, since they would not remove their veils for a Western stranger -- possessed, in his eyes, "the majesty which is lacking among ourselves in the gravest circumstances." Years later he confided in a letter to a friend that "it was among these people that I really discovered for myself the beauty of antiquity." And not only of antiquity, either. De Mornay was amused to see that when Delacroix was finally admitted to a harem, he became...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: Drinking the Color | 1/9/1995 | See Source »

...read them, and we poor moderns have only seen hieroglyphs in them." Morocco saved him from the abstraction that had weakened French responses to the classic. A painting like his Military Exercises of the Moroccans (1832) shows Delacroix using real life -- the ceremonial charge and fusillade of Arab warriors, rearing on their explosively energetic mounts like showoff bikers doing wheelies -- to recall the truth of energy and immediacy that people must have seen in marble battles 2,000 years before...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ART: Drinking the Color | 1/9/1995 | See Source »

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