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Word: furred (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...father ejaculated that he was a "good straight boy ... a source of great pride and rejoicing" to his parents. There came a rumor that another inquisition might be held, and Hillyer Hawthorne Straton showed his mettle by remarking that, if it were held, "Oh, boy! Won't the fur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Son-of-a-Pastor | 8/2/1926 | See Source »

PLAIN TALES OP THE NORTH- Thierry Mallet-Putnam ($2). Captain Mallet is president of a fur company (Revillon Freres) whose flag, flapping at the masthead of a trading schooner, has been watched for and hailed by Indians and Eskimos on the headlands of Labrador and Hudson's Bay for two centuries. Besides traveling in Siberia and soldiering in France, Captain Mallet has visited these hardy trappers many times. Evidently he has found time for good reading on his trips, or maybe it is through his Gallic inheritance that he comes by the lucid, restrained prose in which, a page...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NON-FICTION: North of 53 | 7/26/1926 | See Source »

...tens of millions of small water-folk rejoicing in a new paradise. Scientists do not believe in fairies, good or bad, but they were quite willing to believe that much of Central Europe's woe was the work of these small water-folk. They were muskrats, common American fur-bearing rodents, fiber zibethicus. In 1903 an enterprising Czech farmer introduced them to the Danube basin where they increased and multiplied amazingly. But as they multiplied in their new environment, their coats deteriorated, becoming short and scrubby and unable to compete in the fur markets with the pelts of their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Fiber Zibethicus | 7/26/1926 | See Source »

...Whatcha diggin' fur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany: Hound | 7/12/1926 | See Source »

Seventeen fur-bundled men and a fox terrier had passed in an airship completely up and over the Earth's icy pate, parting that wilderness as a comb might part the unexplored thatch of a wild man from Borneo. From Spitzbergen in Barent's Sea via the North Pole and the Pole of Inaccessibility, to Point Barrow, Alaska, they had peered out of their gondola for new lands, and in a strip of white waste 2,000 miles long by 10 to 100 wide, had spied none. They had seen seals, roaming polar bears, their own flags (Italian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Polar Pilgrims: May 24, 1926 | 5/24/1926 | See Source »

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