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Word: fined (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...following letter, which has just been received by Professor Copeland from a former University undergraduate, expresses a fine determination to see the present war through to a finish, and a confidence in the final outcome. Because of the sentiments expressed in the letter, it is to be used by the publicity department of the Liberty Loan Committee to rouse the country for the third Loan Campaign. Professor Copeland has kindly given the letter to the CRIMSON for publication...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "IN WAR TO FIGHT TO FINISH" | 4/5/1918 | See Source »

...while the other section in which I was (eight of us) stayed to fly till 12. It had become cloudy and when I went up I had to climb through one stratum of clouds to where the target was being towed, at 1,200 metres. It was an extraordinarily fine sight. Above this cloud floor it was clear and bright. The clouds looked very solid like great snowdrifts, with crevices, through which one could see the ground far below and peaks and domes rising above the others. The machine would skip over the cloud floor jumping the pits and cutting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DESCRIBES AERIAL SHOOTING | 4/1/1918 | See Source »

...wish to express my appreciation of the fine showing made by each of the three battalions in their inspections this week, not only in their neat, trim appearance, but also in the certainty and precision with which the men executed all their movements," said Major Flynn, after the inspection of the Second and Third Battalions yesterday. "Some of the military authorities at the University feared, after such a long period without practical drill, the Corps would be unable to make a creditable showing. I, however, held no such fear concerning the regiment, and was greatly pleased to see that...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAJOR FLYNN PLEASED WITH CORPS' SHOWING | 3/30/1918 | See Source »

...might please a Watch and Ward investigator to see the lustful Teutons frustrated, but to those of us who have seen "Under Fine" and "Inside the Lines," it is trite and threadbare stuff. Mr. Anspacher, a co-author of the Belgium piece, might better confine himself to writing of unchastened women instead of the chastened kind, and Mr. Marcin, the other co-author, should stick to crook plays. As for Producer Woods, he is doing as well as when he produced "Bertha, the Beautiful Cloak Model," but not much better...

Author: By N. H. Ohara g., | Title: The Theatre in Boston | 3/28/1918 | See Source »

...enemy spirit which we have left in ourselves. Profiteering, for example, is the chief representative among us of the German idea,--the very thing we are fighting against. There is probably less profiteering in America in this war than in any other we have ever fought, and more fine examples of sacrifice of personal interest on the part of large business. What we have chiefly got to do is to clear out the last remnant of the old evil. This can best be done by treating a few conspicuous examples as traitors are treated...

Author: By William ERNEST Hocking and Professor OF Philosophy., S | Title: WAR IS CONFLICT OF MORALES | 3/26/1918 | See Source »

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