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Word: baring (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...temperamental volcano than as a patient, low-key professional; it’s hilarious to watch him suddenly go on a window-breaking rampage, or dissolve into quiet sobs without warning in mid-conversation, or silently walk into a bathroom and rip it to shreds with his bare hands. But as he falls for Lena, Barry’s energy grows to serve a normal, workable emotion; his outbursts are no longer meaningless cries into a void, but rather are to some self-improving purpose. And, as Barry uses his emotional problems to become a happier human being, Sandler channels...

Author: By Benjamin J. Soskin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Love's Labors | 10/10/2002 | See Source »

...Koshiba and Davis split half the Nobel for their neutrino work; Giacconi, meanwhile, gets the other half of the approximately $1 million prize. His achievement: building a series of X-ray telescopes that have laid bare the secrets of such exotic heavenly objects as quasars, black holes and super-dense neutron stars. And like Koshiba and Davis, he has helped to rectify humanity?s cosmic myopia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nobel Journal: Analyzing Molecules | 10/9/2002 | See Source »

Best way for a girl to get your attention: Bare midriff. With a smile...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Scoped! | 10/3/2002 | See Source »

...Full Monty is really just a tease--the male strippers bare all at the end of the Broadway musical as blinding stage lights prevent the audience from seeing anything--but a well-traveled off-Broadway theatergoer these days is starting to feel like a voyeur in a Chelsea bathhouse. In just the past few months, we have had a naked Frankenstein's creature (Monster), a naked undercover cop (Blue Surge) and naked just about everybody (Mnemonic). Edie Falco and Stanley Tucci play a full-frontal nude scene at the start of the Broadway revival of Terrence McNally's Frankie...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THEATER: Full-Monty Fever | 9/30/2002 | See Source »

...Thirty-five years after Hair, it's just part of the vocabulary now, something that audiences and actors find acceptable." Indeed, of the 70 or 80 actors who auditioned for the roles, Greenberg says, "only one passed on the basis of the nudity." Actors seem far more willing to bare it all onstage--up close and personal--than they are in movies, where it's still rare to see a name actor display his attributes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THEATER: Full-Monty Fever | 9/30/2002 | See Source »

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