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

Jackaroo, n.: boundary rider, station hand, sheep drover...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: A Guide to Strine | 3/28/1983 | See Source »

...fastest draw in theaters from Youngstown to Yokohama. A veteran of spear-and-sandal epics, he converted to shoot-'em-ups three years ago. To lend a scent of sagebrush to his first western, Leone changed his name to Bob Robertson and imported Clint Eastwood, a lanky, rawboned drover on TV's Rawhide. Eastwood's image was too clean-cut for an antihero, so Leone added the necessary smudges-slouch hat, black cheroot, stubble beard and a ratty-looking scrape. For the villain's role, he hired veteran horse-opera heavy Lee Van Cleef...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies Abroad: Hi-ho, Denaro! | 8/4/1967 | See Source »

...best damn cook on the Erie Canal, and the timber drover Bigerlow was lofted into song as the Old Ironsides of all Great Lakes barges. Labor songs, in fact, not only chronicled the building of the nation but also played a part in the actual work, from the winch-hauling shanties of New England sailors to the rhythmic songs of the free-swinging lumberjacks of the great Pacific Northwest. There was even a song that helped people put up rail-and-post fences. And in the most often repeated labor song of all-wherein John Henry, the Negro Paul Bunyan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Folk Singing: Sibyl with Guitar | 11/23/1962 | See Source »

...present obsession with God and Guilt was still submerged. The rainwater in this novel is the gelid London variety; the central occurrence, around which hints of dark guilt flutter and settle like ravens, is the murder of a policeman. The murderer, a simple, solid workingman named Jim Drover, has been sentenced to hang, despite the fact that the policeman he killed had been about to club his wife in a scuffle at a leftist rally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fine Fever | 9/28/1962 | See Source »

...jobless and neither fudge nor genius seemed salable, Greene says that the book is about the injustice of man's justice. It is, but Greene was Greene even then-and his real interest was the vice of man's virtue. Everyone works to win a reprieve for Drover, but motives are messy. His wife is honest enough to know that she could recover from her husband's execution but could not stand the 18 years of withering sexual faithfulness that would follow a jail sentence. The condemned man's Communist friends want propaganda more than...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fine Fever | 9/28/1962 | See Source »

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