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Word: chosen (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...enthusiasm. Princeton has, perhaps, one of the strongest nines which ever represented her. Harvard though sending forth a team for whose success she has great hoes, cannot afford to miss any chance to add to its efficiency: and the one great thing the University can give to her chosen few today is the inspiration of an enthusiastic send...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 5/5/1893 | See Source »

...made. The attendance, however, was small, and if more interest is not shown the team will have a poor chance of winning the spring match. Yale and University of Pennsylvania have accepted the challenge, and it is hoped that Princeton will also do so. The team is not finally chosen till a week before the match, and every one has a chance for a place. Cups are shot for twice a week, Tuesdays and Fridays, at the club grounds, and matches will be shot with other clubs. But everything depends on the support of the college and the shoots should...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Shooting Club. | 5/3/1893 | See Source »

...Lane '81, formerly assistant librarian of the college, has been chosen librarian of the Boston Athenaeum...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fact and Rumor. | 4/29/1893 | See Source »

...sermon and he will be followed on successive Sundays by Rev. W. H. Vibbert, D. D., of New York. Rev. F. S. Luther, of Hartford, Rev. W. R. Huntington, D. D., of New York and Rev. H. J. Satterlee, D. D. of New York. The assisting ministers are chosen from the leading Episcopal clergymen in Cambridge and seats are reserved for members of the University until just before the services begin. Episcopalians and all others who are interested in hearing representative men of different denominations will find these sermons instructive and interesting and well worth attending...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 4/22/1893 | See Source »

...Sargent was by no means homounius libri, a man of a single book, but few scholars have shown more devotion to a chosen author than he has manifested to his beloved Horace. That classic writer was always a favorite of the learned. The perfection of his style, the admirable truth and discrimination of his critical judgment, the charming companionable familiarity of his Odes, the thoroughly human feeling which pervades them, qualified by the sensitive fastidiousness inseparable from the highest cultivation, - fit him for the scholar's intimate and the student's guide. Few could appreciate these excellences so fully...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Book Notice. | 4/18/1893 | See Source »

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