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Word: erringly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...from $7 to a breathtaking $70 per person, accompanied by snacks of seeds, figs and nuts. There's also a tea ceremony and tasting session on Tuesday afternoons for $24 a head. And if you're looking to win over your bosses and business associates, presentation boxes of pu er tea-leaf molds from Yunnan province make decidedly tasteful gifts, priced from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Better Kind of Brew | 5/24/2004 | See Source »

...approaches the green fields of commencement, Gossip Guy has been getting really intimate with his pet bong, Billy Bong Thornton, leaving him little time for sharp-eyed observations on the nuanced social lives of Harvard idiots. Thankfully, his sober-er sister Gossip Gal is on the case with a little help from her friends. Together they bring you an incredible dose of clear-headed lies, pure-lunged rumors, and urine-test-passing innuendo...

Author: By Only GOSSIP Gal... and The One, S | Title: Gossip Gal! | 5/6/2004 | See Source »

Beckham had another perk: it landed Nagra a continuing role on ER. (Finally! An Indian doctor on a U.S. hospital show.) But while contestants on The Bachelor go on a Bollywood-theme date this week, few South Asians are on the big or small screen in the U.S. (The Simpsons' Apu doesn't count...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Culture: A Cultural Grand Salaam | 5/3/2004 | See Source »

...instance, is that their stories, which are resolved in an hour, sell better in reruns. Series like Alias and 24, which have deeply involving serial plots, are poor candidates for reruns, but they have committed fan bases willing to buy DVDs. And while Top 10 hits like Friends and ER sell well on DVD, animated, sci-fi and other kinds of cult shows do best, in proportion to their ratings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: It's Not TV. It's TV on DVD | 4/19/2004 | See Source »

...Daeschner relates in his obsessive, down-and-dirty travelogue, True Brits (Arrow Books; 340 pages), they're the kind of thing that passed for "physical culture" among the Anglo-Saxons of yore. And what's more, such ancient sports and kindred traditions are very much alive and, er, kicking in 21st century Britain. The Cotswold "Olimpicks" - events included cudgel fights and bearbaiting - survived until the intervention of tut-tutting vicars, landowners and justices of the peace in 1852. The sport of shin kicking, a variant of wrestling - with heavy boots and few rules - hung on a few decades longer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Oddball Olympics | 4/4/2004 | See Source »

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