Word: clicked
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Mysteriously, friends materialize from the milieu of strangers encountered daily; the best part of the adventure is figuring out the people with whom you click best. Bumming around at 3 in the morning with a friend--who also is facing the pressure to be doing something more productive--turns out to be the best time of your life. Despite all the kvetching about the Harvard social scene, few complain of a lack of fascinating people...
Mysteriously, friends materialize from the milieu of strangers encountered daily; the best part of the adventure is figuring out the people with whom you click best. Bumming around at 3 in the morning with a friend--who also is facing the pressure to be doing something more productive--turns out to be the best time of your life. Despite all the kvetching about the Harvard social scene, few complain of a lack of fascinating people...
...course, the Shakespeare search engine I used to find these quotes has a distancing quality because it displays only the line of text in which the word you want appears. It's up to you to click on the link to the whole scene and discover or recall the context of the language. Part of what has kept Shakespeare alive in our society for so long is his eminent quotability in small catch-phrases. It is easy for a politician, a screenwriter or a columnist to manipulate the poet's words for her own purposes. But the genius of Shakespeare...
...been issued, and it is up to you answer it. This year MIT has chosen Thomas L. Magliozzi and Raymond F. Magliozzi to speak at its graduation, two men you've probably never heard of. Neither, to be honest, had we. These two men are better known as Click and Clack, the Tappet brothers. respected Cambridge auto mechanics and MIT graduates. They are also co-hosts of Car Talk, a syndicated radio program broadcast from the offices of Dewey, Cheetham & Howe in Harvard Square (aka Car Talk Plaza...
...December 1997, Varsitybooks.com president Tim Levy and fellow Georgetown law student Eric Kuhn thought of the idea for a company that could offer students all the books on their syllabi at the click of a mouse...