Word: expressione
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Incidentally, the expression "a bold little English licensed pharmacist" scarcely fits Mr. Titterington, who is the spare type of Englishman, over six feet in height.
The righteous and revered late publisher of the New York Times, Adolph Simon Ochs, early suggested that the pregnant logotype be omitted on AP feature stories. Since last May AP has circularized its members saying: "NO LOGOTYPE PLEASE! Editors: In the interests of providing a livelier Washington column than would...
Only a handful of Friends wore plain bonnets or broad-brimmed black hats, but the use of the oldtime Quaker ''thee" and "thy" was common. No one quaked or trembled, as would once have been permissible, but there was some public weeping, notably by British Quaker Harvey, who...
In Boston, where "Cabots speak only to Lowells, and Lowells speak only to God," where young Jews yearn to become Louis Brandeises and young Catholics hope to be Joseph P. Kennedys, there may be no more frustrated individuals than in other cities. But in Boston an ambitious young Harvard psychiatrist...
The letters were running about 50-50 on the subject when R. W. Alston whose inquiring mind had profited by the August bank holiday offered a new idea: "Recently I visited the seaside and was flattered to find myself the object of attentive curiosity until I realized that the ladies...