Word: featly
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...sort of side door with an [elevated] window—one of those glass doors you see in movies that people jump into and the glass shatters.” This analogy seems fair, as Ganatra certainly crashed the math party, having accomplished his mathematical feat at such a young age. After much prodding, Ganatra finally admitted to only studying specific infinite cases of the question, as opposed to addressing the entire question by looking at each and every case. This can slide, however; in the cases he did examine, Ganatra actually proved a stronger result than asked...
This is quite a feat for an Ivy League freshman who had only a few weeks to learn Harvard’s highly-complex offense before he played in the season’s second series. Such an offensive contribution by a freshman is usually unheard of in the Ivy League. However, while Dawson might be a newcomer to Harvard, he is no stranger to college ball...
...astounding feat of wartime engineering and defiance, the Ho Chi Minh Trail was actually a 16,000-kilometer network of roads, hacked by hand out of the jungles of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. It helped the communist North win the Vietnam War. U.S. forces never managed to destroy it, despite carpet bombing and the use of Agent Orange. Since the war ended, however, the trail has been largely reclaimed by jungle and myth; only a few, isolated fragments are accessible. Christopher Hunt's 1996 book Sparring with Charlie documented his trying, and mostly failing, to trace it. Indeed...
There were no questions about Jay Mills, Nick Palazzo, Jamil Soriano or Jack Fadule. And that—more so than its 636 total yards—was the Crimson offense’s most impressive feat this weekend...
...jokes than on melodies, but it's hard now to explain precisely why Monty Python's Flying Circus, which launched on Oct. 5, 1969 with a skit about sheep nesting in trees, should have so captivated viewers. There are precious few clues in the book, which is a hexagonal feat of memory, not self-analysis, though they rightly pay tribute to comic forebears such as Spike Milligan. The launch of Python was certainly a tribute to the laissez-faire latitude of the BBC's comedy department, which cheerfully commissioned 13 shows from John Cleese, Eric Idle, Graham Chapman, Michael Palin...