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

...join him or to answer his impassioned letters. "Make fun of me," wrote Bonaparte. "Stay on in Paris, have lovers of whom the whole world may know, never write to me, and-for all that, I will only love you ten times more. If this is not madness, fever, delirium!" When Bonaparte sailed for Egypt, Josephine plunged into an affair with a cavalry officer nine years her junior, and through him accumulated a small fortune speculating in shoddy military supplies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Oh Mistress Mine | 2/7/1964 | See Source »

...centuries past, Bombay was considered so unhealthy that "two monsoons were the life of a man." Bombay is still relatively dangerous to life and limb, but what its citizens feared last week was not malarial fever or dengue but hurtling autos, gangsters, and commuter trains so jampacked that festoons of passengers hang perilously from the doors. "What can we do?" shrugs Mayor Eshakbhai Bandookwala, resplendent in a red turban and seated behind a huge desk topped with black glass. "This city is growing; it leads India. Everybody wants to come here because we have work for them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: Hustler's Reward | 1/10/1964 | See Source »

...would reply. Star goalie Tom Apprille had a bad fever during the loss to Toronto, so the 9-1 score doesn't prove anything. Besides, the Eagles won by 10-2 over an Army team which clobbered Harvard, 5-1, so B.C. should win by 12 goals, not lose...

Author: By Joel Havemann, | Title: Sextet to Face Eagles In Vital Game Tonight | 1/8/1964 | See Source »

...touted by the influential left-wing weekly L'Express. The description fitted Defferre so perfectly that few Frenchmen had any doubt whom L'Express had in mind. As the Monsieur X campaign boomed on, Gaullists began to squirm, and Defferre's original resistance to the presidential fever weakened...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: A New Challenger? | 12/27/1963 | See Source »

Davis did well for four days. Then his system tried to reject the graft. He ran a fever, and the kidneys began to falter. The doctors boosted Davis' dosage of immunity-suppressing drugs. To their relief, the treatment worked. In the fourth week there was another, similar crisis. Adam's kidneys were behaving toward their new host in about the way a transplanted human kidney would have. X rays and increased drug doses got the fever down and the kidneys went back to work...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: Spare Parts from Chimp to Man | 12/27/1963 | See Source »

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