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Word: familiarization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

HAMLET. Richard Burton is a virile, extraverted Hamlet with no hint of the melancholy self-questioning that stays his killing of the King. However, Burton's fresh phrasing of the play's famed familiar lines lends great luster to the evening...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Jun. 12, 1964 | 6/12/1964 | See Source »

...writes Palmer's copy; the line drawings illustrating the text are traced from photographs taken of Palmer in Pittsburgh in 1959. About the only editorial control that Sam Snead exerts over his column, which has been running since 1940, is to insist that he be shown wearing that familiar Snead trademark, the porkpie straw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Columnists: Prose from the Pros | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

...been in dutch with Rome. Shortly before the Vatican Council began in 1962, an Italian edition of their encyclical proposing considerations for the council was withdrawn from circulation because of "errors" in the translation; in fact, the Holy Office objected to the Dutch bishops' defense of the now familiar idea of episcopal collegiality-that is, the bishops' sharing ruling power over the church with the Pope. Rome also informed Bernard Cardinal Alfrink of Utrecht that the principal author of the encyclical, the brilliant Dominican speculative theologian Edouard Schillebeeck, would not be acceptable as a theological adviser...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Roman Catholics: In Dutch with the Vatican | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

Some of the poems, of course, are protest pieces, and a few even come in the tired, familiar voice of the hipster...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Love Withheld | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

This large, crude, simple vision may be vaguely familiar to those who remember Paul Muni as Juárez, Wallace Beery as Pancho Villa, or Elia Kazan's Zapata, which had Judases aplenty and Marlon Brando on the same white horse that tourists can see in Rivera's mural in the National Palace. A novelist has more trouble than the makers of film epics. In this case, Fuentes has had to package the whole corpus of Mexican history into the dying body of a septuagenarian symbol named Artemio Cruz...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Marxist Myth of Mexico | 6/5/1964 | See Source »

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