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Word: byronic (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...many painters but not enough galleries. Because of high gallery fees and commissions, the too-numerous painters have a hard time getting their pictures into the too-few galleries. Two young Minneapolis painters, Robert Kilbride and Byron Bradley, have thought of a way out. Along with five other young artists, they have opened the Art Collectors Club-a combination supermarket and lending library for pictures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Supermarket Gallery | 8/25/1952 | See Source »

Dickens used like as a conjunction; Winston Churchill says "This is me"; and authors from Shakespeare to Shaw have followed everyone with a they. Meredith wrote "Who has he come for?" and Dryden said "these kind of thoughts." Byron was forever using don't with a singular subject ("She will come round-mind if she don't"), and Lytton Strachey apparently never mastered the difference between...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: I Didn't Do Nothing | 8/18/1952 | See Source »

...door Patricia's mother got a card with a number on it. At the registration table she gave Pat's vital statistics and signed a release. Pat was weighed; then she lay face down on an examination table, her buttocks bared. Dr. Byron P. York, prominent Houston physician who volunteered for the job, picked up a syringe bearing the same number as Pat's card and gave her the shot. Pat's whimpering was soon stilled with a lollipop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Betting on G. G. | 7/14/1952 | See Source »

...BYRON C. NELSON Spooner...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jun. 23, 1952 | 6/23/1952 | See Source »

...Michelangelo ceiling in the Sistine Chapel, where a sign cautions: "Visitors are forbidden to lie on the floor." In Venice, they fed the pigeons in St. Mark's Square, drifted down the Grand Canal in gondolas, and pointed out to each other the palaces once lived in by Byron and Browning. They rolled through the hill towns of Siena, Perugia and Orvieto in air-conditioned motor coaches of the government's CIAT Travel Agency (Florence to Rome: $6.50), equipped with radios, lavatories, bars and pretty hostesses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TRAVEL: Invasion, 1952 | 6/23/1952 | See Source »

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