Word: deters
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Especially I am opposed to capital punishment. No one should be executed--not even Andy Mellon. Killing one man will not deter another from committing murder and obviously will not help the man executed. However, Governor Rolph's plan of turning the guilty men over to the mob is not correct and when he runs for office again he will not have a corporal's guard in his support...
...this gap in his knowledge and desires to remedy it, he discovers that in order to do so he must go through the lengthy process of learning Latin and Greek, must, in fact, devote a considerable portion of his college career to it. This, of course, is sufficient to deter most students, and cause them to fall back upon the unsatisfactory plan of attempting to get a smattering of erudition by desultory, individual reading...
...that no one has thus far been able to chart her titanic course through the letters of our time. She is herself inimical to critics, and one of her strongest aphorisms insists that the artist stands in need of appreciation, but never of criticism. This has been sufficient to deter many of the faculty; Sherwood Anderson, most apt among her pupils, stylizes, and Ernest Hemingway, imitates, her. In "Axel's Castle," Mr. Edmund Wilson makes some attempt to isolate her peculiar position in the Symbolist movement; he quotes, he explains a poem. But her personal development glimmers through his words...
...Lament is a good Republican but that did not deter him from flatly contradicting President Hoover's panicky campaign utterance that the U. S. had been "within two weeks of going off the gold standard." Said he: "Among all the alarums and excursions of the last twelve months we have never been near the point of abandoning the gold standard. Nothing can or will drive us from that standard. . . . American dollars are the safest things in all the world...
...students are full or part-time workers. The trustees have decreed that a ruling previously affecting applicants for tuition loans, shall also apply to those seeking scholarships: "An applicant's style of living must be such as to justify his request for financial aid. . . ." This may deter many from joining upperclass eating clubs...