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Word: carelessly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

Yale's first game was little more than a flaseo, the weak Maine team being smothered under a 37 to 0 score. As was to prove the case for many weeks, however the Blue's representative was not a team but a Blue squad of eleven men. Careless handling of Thurman's clever punts was as the chief factor in the first reverse for Yale, and Virginia took a 10 to 0 victory. By desperate plugging through the line, Yale was barely able to defeat Lehigh 7 to 6 the next Saturday, and the following week the Elis took...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BROWN GAME PROVED TO BE CRISIS IN YALE'S SEASON | 11/20/1915 | See Source »

...course she would have disqualified any player known to receive pay above his expenses--that is a different matter. Of the five men some had played at Quogue before; all get their information from Yale men who had played at Quogue or been concerned with the Quogue team. Culpably careless they may have been. I see no reason for charging them with anything worse. When the new committee, not grasping the situation till the damage was done, expounded the rule to them, they paid for their board, but too late...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Comment | 10/28/1915 | See Source »

Yale Still Careless...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COMING OPPONENTS WERE SUCCESSFUL SATURDAY | 10/11/1915 | See Source »

...Careless, carefree students can not grasp in an instant the full significance of war. It took a year for the lesson to strike home to the University of Toronto. Now the students are exhibiting a firm but quiet patriotism of the highest order. War has become real to them and made their response to duty ready. If Harvard were in the same situation it would respond in the same...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO. | 10/11/1915 | See Source »

...that is not well written, no contribution that makes one feel that the editors were short of material and had to fill up somehow. It is frankly undergraduate, frankly literary, devoid of pretensiousness and and affectation, entirely normal and sane. Undergraduate publications are apt to be either trivial and careless or else over serious, too much impressed with their splendid mission. Both these pitfalls the Monthly successfully avoids...

Author: By F. SCHENCK ., | Title: Good Specimen of Monthly | 5/18/1915 | See Source »

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