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

...quick glance around the hall-way confirmed by suspicions, however: the members of this group had, in their great munificence, decided to bless all of Harvard with copies of their newsletter. So I started reading. And what did I find...

Author: By David B. Lat, | Title: Pro-Choice: Abortion to Go? | 2/18/1994 | See Source »

...Tokio, obscenity--as beauty--is ultimately an instrument of social good. "All these geniuses who believe in our moral obligation to save the world as Harvard students post only malevolent comments on this board and fail to bless the poor masses with the beauty of their poetry," Rose raves. "Oh poop...

Author: By R.i. Wilson, | Title: Lamont Poetry Board | 2/3/1994 | See Source »

What is at stake in Professor Stager's determination to throttle the Semitic Museum is nothing less than the definition of a field. God bless the Philistines interred at Ashkelon, and God bless those who have exhumed their remains. But Semitic scholarship is no longer riveted simply on monuments and shards. Semitic cultures and civilizations survive and flourish in our time. President Eliot and Jacob Schiff understood that this would be so, and the men and women who reopened the Semitic Museum in 1982 understood this, too. Over the last decade the Museum has exemplified the extension of the field...

Author: By Martin Peretz, | Title: Cleaning Out the Mailbag: The Semitic Museum | 1/5/1994 | See Source »

...Almighty God, we ask that you bless our parents, teachers and country throughout the day. In your name we pray. Amen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Without a Prayer | 12/20/1993 | See Source »

...quirkiness, however, can also be overwhelming, and not all of the actors are as successful in carrying off their roles. Peter (Mark Baskin) is a tad too stereotypical as a formerly-imprisoned teleevangelist, but Baskin tries to make the most of his purposely cheesy lines, greeting Donna with "God bless your four chambered heart" and "God bless your ventricles." As the gullible, God-loving Donna, Katie Guillory doesn't seem to know where to focus her gaze on stage, which makes her performance a bit too spacy and distracted. Kessler occasionally overstretches reality--the idea of Donna writing...

Author: By Diane E. Levitan, | Title: Kessler's Take On What We Talk About When We Talk About Love | 12/16/1993 | See Source »

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