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Word: emotionalize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Eden Tree is written in uneven rhymed lines that look jerky on the page but read easily. A parabolic narrative, its language stripped of ornament, it has few memorable lines (one of them: "There are always mornings and only some of them are good") but its cumulative effect is one...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Having Eaten | 8/24/1931 | See Source »

Director von Sternberg, neither creator nor translator, had the insoluble problem of duplicating a masterpiece in a medium which it was not meant to fit. The string of hasty sequences with which the picture replaces the first volume of the novel fails to make Clyde Griffiths excitingly alive, "unless the...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures: Aug. 17, 1931 | 8/17/1931 | See Source »

Thus Ramsay MacDonald, his Scotch voice trembling with emotion, welcomed the ministers of six other nations to a conference in London last week to decide what could be done to save Germany from a collapse that would almost certainly drag down the rest of Europe.

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Quickly Done | 8/3/1931 | See Source »

THE life William Wordsworth touches only at rare intervals that higher inconsistency which is popularly conceded to poets. The conventionality of his prosaic life is as unconventional as "poetic rapture" would be in the pecadilloes of George Babbitt. In an attempt of fit Wordsworth into the poetic niche of the...

Author: By H. A. R., | Title: BOOKENDS | 6/3/1931 | See Source »

Twenty U. S. women practiced in London last week the curtsies they proposed to make this week to King George and Queen Mary. Along with the other 19, Mrs. Charles Gates Dawes, wife of the Ambassador, would present in an atmosphere breathless with awe her own Virginia. Meanwhile Their Majesties...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Great Gobbet | 5/25/1931 | See Source »

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