Word: burstingly
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...Riding a burst of confidence off its first sweep since last November--also over Vermont and Dartmouth--the Crimson has the mental advantage...
What was so disappointing was that, when I looked around the auditorium, I saw so many familiar faces: classmates, acquaintances and even many close friends all laughing along with these jokes. The girl from my art history class burst into loud laughter. The guy who sat next to me on the shuttle to New York started clapping every time he heard the word "fag." I even saw a friend from high school scream, "Take...
...another droll and charming English confidante. He once again steals his scenes from his leading lady, especially in one comical scene where he must retrieve Abbie's key from her ex-boyfriend Kevin. Skeletally, both films overlap in plot line as well. During a scene when Robert and Abbie burst spontaneously into Doug McLean's classic "American Pie" at a funeral, one can't help but compare it to Everett's similarly spontaneous outburst of "I Say A Little Prayer" in the earlier film. In both personas, Everett also frequently tosses his Rupert-y quips. As he tells Abbie...
...Internet has hit the Chinese government with all the force of an electromagnetic burst. The number of Net users, now 10 million, is doubling every six months--the fastest growth in Asia. Money is pouring in from U.S. venture capitalists. There are 50,000 Chinese domain names. By some calculations, China will have the second largest population of Web surfers in the world, after the U.S., by 2005. Such a frenetic buildup would delight most governments. It terrifies Beijing's officials, who fear the Net will vaporize their power over the masses. "It is not like anything they have ever...
...rest of the artists featured on the album are the type of young musicians who have been in the business for a while, but will inevitably, once they make it big, be described as having "burst onto the scene." Moby works his magic with the blues-tinged song from his album Play, "Why Does My Heart Feel So Bad?" Beth Orton, whose album Central Reservation made many critics' best-of-1999 lists, croons "The Stars All Seem to Weep" in a far-away childlike voice that makes you want to hand her a box of tissues and some Godiva...