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Word: feels (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
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Usage:

...Yale men feel fairly confident of victory. They have nine freshmen at the 'varsity training table and they have all played at one time or another upon the team this fall. Among them are Stillman, Dyer, Richards. Hinkey, Coxe, Beard, Colt, and possibly Norton. The Yale freshman team, without most of the above men, have played a large number of games this season and have shown great improvement. They do good individual work and have been coached in team play carefully...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard '95 vs. Yale '95. | 11/27/1891 | See Source »

...foot ball dinner has served just this purpose. It has afforded a chance for the expression of what men feel ought to be done, and has shown that our single purpose is to bind together firmly all the separate and varied phases of Harvard individuality in one great effort to develop our athletics along the right line. Individuality has there received its fullest expression, and from this our leaders have found the way to secure greater unity. We hope that the foot ball dinner is not to be omitted this year. A slight change could be made advantageously, however...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 11/27/1891 | See Source »

Corneille and Racine nationalized the classic forces of the Renaissance in France after Italy had ceased to feel their stimulus. Rousseau was the first to start the new Romantic Movement. Parallel to Rousseau sprang up the new regime in Germany which ever was under stronger bonds with the middle ages than other nations. The result of this movement was the study of everything Mediaeval by Grimm and Uhland with a view to tracing all modern ideals to an orgin in a national folk lore. When the Romantic impulse for these studies died, and the modern idea of science for sciences...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Marsh's Lecture. | 11/25/1891 | See Source »

...Professor and Mrs. Farrar on Kirkland Street, and Longfellow, a slender, blonde young professor, was lodging in the Craigie House, which became his home afterwards. He pays a glowing tribute to Lowell's wife, and dilates at some length upon her influence on her husband. Harvard men will feel themselves thoroughly at home in reading the article for it is full of familiar pictures and drawings of the different places and people spoken of and the pen and ink and pencil drawings by William Goodrich Beal and Sears Gallagher do much to strengthen the warm sympathy created by the text...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New England Magazine. | 11/6/1891 | See Source »

This meeting is of special interest to freshmen, and all who feel that they are capable of doing anything at all in any of the events, are especially urged to enter their names. So far a very good number have done so, but the management feels that there are still many good men who might enter but have not. It is of great advantage to the men entering, to the class and to the college to have the entries as large as possible...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: H. A. A. Meetings. | 10/27/1891 | See Source »

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