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Word: dialection (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Small (5 ft. 2 in.; 105 Ibs.), bushy-browed Peggy picks up dialects as easily as Alec Templeton catches a tune. Whenever she is assigned a new one, she talks on the telephone with a Hollywood bit-player who speaks the dialect, instantly echoes his accent and inflection. Now she has more alter egos than she can possibly keep at work. Solution: she is writing five new shows to keep herself busy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Vocal Varieties | 8/5/1946 | See Source »

...tries to tell as Conrad or Maugham would. Those selected in this book - 24 stories written over a span of some 30 years - remain as readable as they were salable in the '20s, when they were hot stuff in Harper's and the Atlantic Monthly. Gullah dialect, a Mohammedan marriage ceremony, the way a schooner's boom may swing when she luffs - such varied "local color" is thickly applied...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Staple Stories | 7/29/1946 | See Source »

Danny sang it for the first time one night in February 1940, in La Martinique, a Manhattan basement nightclub. He was an immediate hit, not only because he was funny singing in Russian dialect, but also because he puckishly suggested that he, too, could be a tree, a sled, or anything his comic imagination wanted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Git Gat Gittle | 3/11/1946 | See Source »

Some of the situations are tried, true and a little tired. But the Rumanian siren, speaking sonorously in a participial dialect of her own, is a fresh creation; and Hume Cronyn's Freddie Potts might be something straight out of the early Booth Tarkington. Slim Robert Walker is wholly likable as the husband. June Allyson is a model little bride, especially when she sidles up to her man with an icebox tray in her hand and says with a happy sigh, "Our first ice cubes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures, Mar. 11, 1946 | 3/11/1946 | See Source »

They have been around plenty. Almost all of them have been abroad, and 50% have lived in foreign countries all over the world. As a result, better than half of them speak foreign languages, and one can get along in Malay dialect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Feb. 25, 1946 | 2/25/1946 | See Source »

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