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Word: clouding (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...only cloud over a generally cheerful afternoon was the failure of Tobin, Bob Welz, and Jeff Grate--who had the three highest averages until this week--to match their teammates' pace. Welz's 1-for-4 day hurt chances for the Greater Boston League batting title...

Author: By Robert P. Marshall jr., | Title: Baseball Team Tops M.I.T., 12-3; Neville and Lincoln Pace Rout | 5/18/1966 | See Source »

...movement works best in small, humorous scenes like the early one of the itching, scratching, sneezing, retching freeloaders in Shen Te's tobacco store, and in the finale when a congregation of riffraff salutes the gods with raised mop as the "illustrious ones" fly away on a winch-raised cloud...

Author: By George H. Rosen, | Title: The Good Woman of Setzuan | 5/6/1966 | See Source »

...impotents who people the play, have been merely the fantasies of Waltz's buzzing brain. This whole monstrous world, suggests Nabokov, is just a madman's dream. Does Waltz speak for Nabokov? Nabokov says nyet. Yet by refusing to establish any objective grounding, Nabokov reduces his cloud-capped tower of fantasy to a dusty heap of speculation. The reader is left to realize that where there is no possible answer, there can have been no genuine question...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Nabokov Defense | 4/29/1966 | See Source »

...required Kirby's Flying Circus (London), a Godzilla-ish sea monster, smoke generators, a wave-making machine, a mobile cloud-carriage and an expert ballet troupe--but the Boston Opera's unfathomable Sarah Caldwell managed to elevate Jean-Phillipe Rameau's mediocre first opera, Hippolyte et Aricie (1733), in its American premiere, to a delightful rococo Juliet of the Spirits...

Author: By Jeffrey B. Cobb, | Title: Rameau's Hippolyte | 4/14/1966 | See Source »

...forest and D major for twenty minutes ("A la chasse, a la chasse!") become upset over an ominous tremolo in the strings; the lights go out, the wave machine starts up, and to cries of "Quel bruit! Quelle flamme I'environe!", Neptune's pet sea-dragon emerges in a cloud of smoke. Hippolyte conveniently rushes in, is promptly swallowed (whole), and the scene ends with the chorus solemnly incanting, "O disgrace cruelle ... Hippolyte n'est plus." (Needless to say, the libretcist took his liberties with Rachine's Phedre; Paristans must have been pleased to find the evil Queen disappearing painlessly...

Author: By Jeffrey B. Cobb, | Title: Rameau's Hippolyte | 4/14/1966 | See Source »

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