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Word: coexistent (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Saddam civil war. But on the day Kirkuk fell, it was hard to find any people who had a bad word to say about any of their neighbors. The central statue of Saddam Hussein was torn down by a crowd of Arabs, Kurds and Turkomans working together. "We can coexist, we all had the same dream: to destroy the Saddam Hussein regime and get democracy," said Kurdish shopowner, Zuhair Muhammed. "We don't want civil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Riot on the Northern Front | 4/10/2003 | See Source »

...images juxtaposed with an image of pop singer Madonna in a leather dominatrix ensemble, from the cover of her “Justify My Love” video. The wall embodies the essence of their relationship—one in which personal connections and similarities enable political differences to coexist...

Author: By Jason D. Park, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Diff'rent Strokes | 4/3/2003 | See Source »

...suspicions in and around Turkey that the reason is simply that Turkey is a majority Muslim country. To eliminate these suspicions, the EU must give Turkey a date. We must show civilizations unifying and working in harmony. Turkey has proved for past 80 years that Islam and secularism can coexist. It's a great model for countries striving for democracy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: U.S. Talks Iraq, Turkey Talks Europe | 12/9/2002 | See Source »

When The Sims Online launches in December, the private dramas of the Sims will emerge on a much larger stage. Instead of Simming alone on their computers, players will connect to central servers over the Internet, where their Sims will coexist and interact in a shared three-dimensional virtual world. In The Sims Online, each player will control a character who lives with, talks to and works for other Sims, all of whom will be controlled by other players, all living together in simulated cities in a simulated country on the Internet. In effect, it's a vast virtual society...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sim Nation | 11/25/2002 | See Source »

...drinker and two-pack-a-day smoker.) Others found urgent reading material as Von Hagens sawed through the skull. Michael Wilks, chairman of the British Medical Association's Medical Ethics Committee, said the event and exhibition were "degrading and sensational rather than educational." But can't education and sensationalism coexist? That's certainly the way it used to be. In 1543, the same year Copernicus published his revolutionary work, De Revolutionibus, Belgian anatomist Andreas Vesalius published De Fabrica, a massively popular work illustrated with scores of statuesque figures serenely posing on pedestals or frolicking in nature without their skin. Vesalius...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: An Anatomy of Our Selves | 11/24/2002 | See Source »

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