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Word: banalized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Routine outings for quality starters, hitters who converted on routine sacrifices and other more banal aspects of the game defined the character of the Harvard baseball team when it won four straight Red Rolfe Division titles, the last...

Author: By Martin S. Bell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Saved by the Bell: Baseball's Rut Deepens | 4/17/2002 | See Source »

...poking fun at their interesting idiosyncrasies. A particularly funny example of this is a classroom scene in which a student asks the teacher if a poet whom the class is studying is gay. After berating the student, accusing him of having a “grubby and ultimately rather banal little mind” and insisting that “the artistic temperament has no gender,” the teacher undermines his own efforts to evade the question when he immediately directs another student to read aloud one of the aforementioned poet’s works, entitled...

Author: By Steven N. Jacobs, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Coming of Age in Birmingham, England | 4/12/2002 | See Source »

...lift up your heads oh you Gateses and Flynns.” Given the comic effect, it is difficult to believe (as we are told) that President Kennedy himself honored her for this poem, or even that it was published in an anthology with such a banal title as “Wings of Song...

Author: By Josiah P. Child, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Crowley: Lost in Translation | 4/12/2002 | See Source »

...last weekend and whether that disrespects some other person she’s “quasi-dating.” Just don’t make it a place to show off your in-depth knowledge of some obscure branch of sociology. In any case, leave the endless banal blathering about relationships to those select professionals appearing...

Author: By Kenyon S. Weaver, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: RANT! | 3/7/2002 | See Source »

...that's P as in Pepsi. It's the story of Babylen Tatarsky, a miserable adman hired by greedy mobsters to translate American jingles and adapt them for a newly capitalistic Russian marketplace. Tatarsky stands in for a whole generation trapped between a discredited Soviet past and a banal, Westernized future, and the absurdity of the situation sends him hunting through the seamy Muscovite underworld for some meaning at the bottom of it all. That he is coached on the way by the ghost of Che Guevara gives you the flavor of Pelevin's darkly anarchic imagination, which reflects...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Homo Zapiens | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

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