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Word: dialection (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Pleistocene Age's Milton Berle, has matched Sid Caesar's staying power or his grip on the loyalty of hard-core fans. More than that, by common show-business consent, he is one of the truly great clowns. Apart from sheer technical mastery of pantomime, dialect, timing and the ad lib, Caesar has a creative gift for spoofing the stuffy and the phony and for finding endless fun in universal human foibles and frustrations. His career, which began as a $10-a-week saxophonist on New York's borsch circuit, has made him a millionaire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Decline of the Comedians | 5/27/1957 | See Source »

Himself Yorkshire-born. Hubert Nicholson, 49. is the first novelist in years to give tragic stature to the mute inglorious farmer. He uses the pungent local dialect tellingly but never unintelligibly. Above all, he has created one of those rare images of an ardent, convention-defying love in which the lovers do not "know what or care where or ask why''-but the reader page-hungrily does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Tempest in the East Riding | 5/6/1957 | See Source »

...title of Mrs. Hubbard's book, Boss Chombale, is the nickname that the natives gave to one of Mrs. Hubbard's sons when the family lived in Africa, the author explained. In the native dialect, the name means "one who has the qualities of a magistrate," the author said...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: 'Cliffe House Mother to Publish Book for Children About Africa | 4/13/1957 | See Source »

...turtle, a rabbit and a bird, and the passage of blood, a corpuscle at a time, through the microphoto-graphed capillaries of live animals. But as the price of admission, the audience had to face a tasteless jangle of gimmicks: a Superman-like "Hemo" to personify blood, dialect comedy, crude mechanical cartoon analogies of circulatory functions ("groceries and garbage"), and a screenful of Disney-like animals spouting slang. In a coy story-within-a-story device, a researcher (Dr. Frank Baxter) and a fiction writer (Richard Carlson) tried to make their material palatable to the cloddish cartoon animals. The total...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Review | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

Gerstl, who has lived in Curacao, emphasized that Papiamento is "very much a living language." He believes his collection of 12 books and pamphlets represents everything ever printed in the dialect, which is just now beginning to be written. There are no dictionaries in Papiamento, only word lists...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Widener Collections To Add Papiamento | 3/9/1957 | See Source »

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