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

...electric train slides into the station 30 miles northwest of Osaka, the pretty conductress announces the last stop in a falsetto singsong: "Finally, honorable passengers, your patience is rewarded...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Honorable Rockettes | 1/3/1955 | See Source »

...drew up a chair beside an old Manhattan cabaret songstress named Spivy, bellowed duets with her for an hour and topped off the act with a Swiss yodeling version of Don't Fence Me In. Spivy's impression of Farouk's yodeling: "Squeaking in a high falsetto...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Aug. 30, 1954 | 8/30/1954 | See Source »

...with a deft courtesy and in a manner almost inconceivably frustrating to the highly ordered world of any lady buyer, she was led for fifteen minutes from paint supplies (Mr. Abercrombie) to the farm store ("that completely kills them") to ladies' lingerie ("They begin to catch on here, our falsetto is not so good.") The tour winds up in the automotive department (Mr. Chrysler speaking) and with the buyer, incoherent with rage attempting to get the operator...

Author: By Michael O. Finkelstein, | Title: Lowell House Roebuck | 1/14/1954 | See Source »

...made a rather poor showing. Mr. Weinrich has trained his singers inadequately in the fundamentals of choral style, and one shudders to think that the insipid solo group in Mendelssohn's Hunting Song represents the best voices at his disposal. In Schubert's Komm Heilger Geist the tenors used falsetto indiscriminately to reach notes beyond their range. Mr. Weinrich continued with Four Peasant Songs by Stravinsky, a work which has replaced Bullfrog on the Bank as a staple of Ivy League glee clubs. In comparison with the virile Amherst version we heard two years ago, Princeton's performance was disappointing...

Author: By R.m. Scarpia, | Title: Harvard and Princeton Glee Clubs | 11/9/1953 | See Source »

...really nice to hear football coaches, college presidents, and athletic directors all over the country loudly thumping their chests and singing the praises of football de-emphasis in a high falsetto voice. It's even nicer when they do something constructive about it. But it's awfully hard to evaluate a move like Yale's abolition of spring practice, which its sponsors say is a great symbol of de-emphasis, but which seems to bear little relation to the factors underlying the current scandalous football situation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Show or Substance? | 11/15/1951 | See Source »

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