Word: gosh
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Schwerin uses no by-gosh or by-Gallup polling system. Each Tuesday and Thursday evening, he fills an NBC studio with 300 listeners. Most of them come because of the free tickets, but many show up to speak their minds about radio. First they are screened to match the particular program's national audience. (Says Schwerin: "There is no such thing as a typical radio audience.") Then they listen to programs, recording their reactions on a tab sheet. About every 30 seconds they check the "good," "fair," or "poor" column. After Jan. 1, testers will use a mechanical gadget...
...didn't date boys until I knew them pretty well-at least for a month-and pretty soon, I saw my girl friend talking to one side with Bill Mauldin. He kept talking, and kept looking at me, and I thought he was probably saying, 'Gosh, what a silly girl.' But later my girl friend came over and said that he wanted to know if he could have my telephone number, and could he call me up. 'Gosh, yes, I said...
...attack on the V.D. front was described in San Francisco last week by its young instigators, Dr. Richard Alexander Koch (rhymes with gosh) and Journalist Arthur Colston Painter. Deciding to tackle venereal disease among factory workers, they asked labor unions to help by encouraging voluntary blood tests. At first suspicious, the unions finally consented when Koch and Painter promised to report the results only to the individual worker (not to his union or employer...
...Gosh, it was good to get those finals out of the way. This week we were given a hard earned rest. I spent the hour in the sack...
...Gosh, When I Tell 'Em." War-hardened U.S. and British correspondents seemed more impressed than Dr. Imbo. No man-made scene of battle and destruction had shaken them so verbally. They wrote: ". . . incredibly awesome. . . . The great lambent tongue on the mountainside . . . some giant blast furnace suddenly gone berserk. ... A moving, burning coalyard ... a torrid, gluey mass ... a gigantic, grey-and-orange glowworm. ... All the freight cars in the world had hauled cinders from all the steel mills ever built and dumped them. . . ." But a G.I. corporal from Indiana topped them all. Said he, as he watched Vesuvius in action...