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Word: arduous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Ralph: One can't start recriminations too early in a marriage. You know, Wanda, pushing back the frontier of the preposterous is arduous labor, and I often wonder why lawyers and sociologists have to shoulder so much of the burden...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sexes: Do Lawyers Make a Marriage? | 12/8/1986 | See Source »

...over a year now University officials have been trying to formulate a plan for an alternative to the Vietnam-era Committee on Rights and Responsibilities (CRR). It is disappointing that they have realized nothing more profound during this arduous process than that the name of the infamous body must be changed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Missing the Point | 11/6/1986 | See Source »

Arguments made time and again echoed anew; results that were foregone conclusions took arduous days to achieve. Complained Senate Majority Leader Robert Dole: "We already had this vote. We've been here. We were here in March." But however lost their cause, Senate opponents of the Reagan Administration's $100 million aid package for the contra forces in Nicaragua dug in and fought. They offered impassioned rhetoric and put forward more than a dozen amendments on matters ranging from the use of U.S. military trainers to funding for Nicaragua's closed opposition newspaper La Prensa. Nearly all of them were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Check Is Nearly in the Mail | 8/25/1986 | See Source »

...water extending to the sea floor. The mailboxes not only improved visibility below but washed away silt and sand. Fisher's divers have been further equipped with an air lift, a long plastic tube that clears sand away with a blast of compressed air. Still, the search was arduous--and costly to Fisher, both financially and emotionally; in 1975 his oldest son, his daughter-in-law and a crew member were drowned when a tug used in the quest capsized during a storm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Down into the Deep | 8/11/1986 | See Source »

Early travelers tended to emphasize wonders at the expense of precision, secure in the belief that no one would make the same arduous journey simply to contradict them. A colleague of Magellan's reported a strange sight in Patagonia: "One day, without anyone expecting it, we saw a giant, who was on the shore of the sea, quite naked, and was dancing and leaping, and singing, and whilst singing he put the sand and dust on his head . . . He was so tall that the tallest of us only came up to his waist." After the dawn of the Enlightenment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Travelogues in Space and Time a Book of Travellers' Tales Edited by Eric Newby | 7/28/1986 | See Source »

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