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Word: dragon (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...cringe, learn or revel with the occasional winner, whose businesses have included tailor-made clothes for women, beanbag-like hammocks, and mushrooms. Just as in real VC handshakes, deals can unravel during postshow due diligence. There's a Clay Aiken effect too. Like the Idol loser who flourished, Dragon rejects have found cash elsewhere. Dragons' Den looks ripe for the U.S., venture capital's home. Sony is talking with a U.S. network, rumored to be Discovery. --By Mark Halper

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nasty VCs on TV? It's a Brit Hit | 4/17/2005 | See Source »

...recent session, the kids eagerly discussed how to defeat their current opponents—a dragon and an ether snake. “The daylight spell you guys have just used is sucked up by the viper and it has weakened it...What are you going to do now?” Maene asked one of the players, Giulio Marchetti...

Author: By Deanna Dong, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Mastering the Dragon | 4/7/2005 | See Source »

...Well, my ninja stars are double-teaming the dragon,” Giulio said. The others cheered in unison at the result of Giulio’s die roll, patting him on the back...

Author: By Deanna Dong, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Mastering the Dragon | 4/7/2005 | See Source »

...While Hong Kong-made cinema was forgetting how to make money, mainland movies were striking box-office gold. Hero and Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and House of Flying Daggers all proved that there's undoubted demand for good Chinese movies in Asia and beyond. But here's the hope for Hong Kong: even though each of those films were shot in the mainland with Chinese directors, they never would have been made without Hong Kong. Most of the films' stars hail from the city, and all of the movies were co-productions with Hong Kong companies that had experience...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Back in the Picture | 3/21/2005 | See Source »

...Transculturation," it's easy to lose one's bearings. In the exhibition, which opened at the Hong Kong Heritage Museum last week, stately stone Buddhas commingle with Greek gods and goddesses, an Iranian prince, and a bare-chested warrior with a rosy complexion and deep blue eyes. A dragon-edged jade disk vies for attention against vases of swirling Roman glass, Byzantine gold coins and a curious flock of tiny wooden geese that could almost pass for miniatures of the sculptures of Henry Moore. If not for the captions to remind us where the motley 300 objects on display were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Glorious Mess | 3/20/2005 | See Source »

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