Word: fishings
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Nevertheless, few subjects escape the artist's bleak skepticism. Still lifes tend to comment on the transience of things, but Goya's piles of lifeless fish and game lend unexpected violence to this theme: the white fur of a rabbit's belly exposes the wound where it was shot; the blank eyes of a lamb's skull look disconsolately at its butchered torso. Equally unsettling, a large painting of The Taking of Christ is notable less for the sorrowful figure at its center than for the jeering, crazed mob that surrounds him. The same menacing irrationality appears in disturbing later...
...looked at them as the other major force in the league,” Fish said. “We expect them to be at full strength [on Saturday]. It should be a great battle, and that’s the kind of match we need. We won’t make a big deal out of today. It’s who comes to play that day that matters...
...They played well,” Harvard coach Dave Fish ’72 said. “If they can keep the momentum up, they have a good chance to make nationals. Overall, I think we can play even better doubles than that, too. I think we were just nervous with Penn. We lost last year, and they’ve won the league for two years.” Unfazed by the Quakers, the Crimson continued its success with another clean sweep in the singles round...
...Kumar turned what looked like it was going to be a slaughter into a match that ended with a dizzying super-tiebreaker. “He was running around on the baseline, [and] that’s not anything close to his game,” Harvard coach Dave Fish ’72 said of Kumar’s listless 6-1 first set loss. “He’s so dangerous when he starts taking forehands and putting away vollies.”But in the second set, Kumar unleashed the game that he is known...
...India (which, today, is home to the world's largest English-speaking population), but Hindi has spiced the language with a masala of words long-since codified in its dictionaries: chit, guru, jungle, pajamas, pundit, sentry, shampoo, and thug, to name just a few. Indian cuisine long ago surpassed fish-and-chips as Britain's most popular restaurant food. Or, at least, "Anglo-Indian" - England's most popular "Indian" dish, chicken tikka masala, is actually a British invention, since exported to the land that inspired it. Indian property and hotel developers borrow the lexicon of their English counterparts, using terms...