Search Details

Word: fishly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...name it, and Olympic track star Jeanette Bolden, 32, is probably allergic to it. Household dust, cats, seafood. Just the smell of fish cooking on a grill is enough to make her eyes puff up and start to water. But Bolden's allergies are linked to a more serious problem. Like 15 million other Americans, she suffers from asthma, a chronic affliction of the airways in the lungs that can turn the simplest act of breathing into hard labor and leave a person gasping, coughing and wheezing for air. Last fall the gold medalist (100-m relay, 1984) was hospitalized...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Asthma Deadly ... But Treatable | 6/22/1992 | See Source »

...days of unseasonable 32 degrees C (90 degrees F) weather with enough snowfall to close three mountain highways. Paris was hit with a torrential rainstorm -- the worst in a decade -- that crippled the city, poisoned the Seine with sewer effluent, and clogged the river with 300 tons of dead fish. In one hour in early May, a squall dumped a record 110 mm (4 1/3 in.) of rain on Hong Kong, turning steep city streets into rushing rivers and killing five. In the Middle East this January, the wettest, coldest winter in recent memory was capped by a storm that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What's Wrong with the Weather? | 6/15/1992 | See Source »

...with Wildlife Conservation International, the cattle fill a niche formerly occupied by extinct giant sloths, which dined on palm seeds thousands of years before the first Portuguese settlers arrived. This happy coincidence is one reason why humans here get along with the 80 species of mammals, 230 kinds of fish, 650 different birds and 1,100 types of butterflies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Where Mankind and Nature Get Along | 6/8/1992 | See Source »

...Radcliffe Oration was delivered in style byRebecca D. Knowles '92, who compared Harvardstudents to "tuna fish" and "tuna fishers." Sheamused the audience with her metaphoricalexplanation of the process of learning, which shecharacterized as either like fishing or likeswimming safely under water...

Author: By Natasha H. Leland, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Turow Speaks to Class | 6/4/1992 | See Source »

Babies also fit into the new stay-at-home-but-keep-a-Range-Rover-in-the- garag e mentality. Shopping for the Bloomie's Baby layette has replaced comparing the $400 Gaggia cappuccino maker to the Braun. People who own fish poachers now wonder what in the world they were thinking of. To judge by fat and glossy Child magazine, the Vogue of the play-date set, cloning oneself opens up a whole new buying opportunity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why Quayle Has Half a Point | 6/1/1992 | See Source »

Previous | 774 | 775 | 776 | 777 | 778 | 779 | 780 | 781 | 782 | 783 | 784 | 785 | 786 | 787 | 788 | 789 | 790 | 791 | 792 | 793 | 794 | Next