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

...offer two suggestions for Harvard's Hyde Park? The first, that its location be just beside Phillips Brooks House, where the spirit of the noble man may exercise its influence. The second, that receptacles be provided to catch the "hot air," which might then be used to heat the Germanic Museum. ALLEN H. GLEASON...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Letting Off Steam. | 11/24/1919 | See Source »

...United States .... What is the United States doing? Close perusal or reams and reams of congressional; Records fails to show that the United States is doing anything. The treaty will shortly be in effect, with the United States left out in the clod, unwarmed by anything but senatorial hot air. For surely, if this country delays action much longer, the other powers cannot help regarding us with suspicion. What, then, of our prominent trade expansion? Trade come not easily to those who do not inspire confidence and who are late in the field besides. The loud-sounding phrases and round...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: OUT IN THE COLD | 10/14/1919 | See Source »

...unusually large number of candidates have reported for the Phi Beta Kappa baseball team, under the leadership of H. T. Tisdals '19, the newly elected captain, and C. C. Brinton '19, manager. Sixteen aspirants for the honor-man nine have been reporting for daily practice, undaunted by the hot weather. A cut will be made in the squad some time during the coming week for the Yale game...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Many Candidates for P. B. K. Nine | 6/7/1919 | See Source »

Even the most normally complacent and unobserving of Harvard's dripping sons would respond instantly to the suggestion, no matter how veiled or subtle, that yesterday was an exceptionally hot day. Many men, in fact, who had stayed in Cambridge expressly to study for examinations, found refuge only in what Professor Copeland used to consider in pre-war days the most thoroughly established of all Harvard undergraduate activities, namely, "sitting around...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FAHRENHEIT AND EFFICIENCY | 6/5/1919 | See Source »

...which does not seem worthy of a Harvard publication. In entire disinterestedness we do not think it right for a paper which aims to represent, in some degree at least, the best undergraduate opinion as well as the best undergraduate literary ability at Harvard, to embark on a red-hot campaign of bitter personal invective against the President, no matter who he may be, of these United States. Whatever he has done or left undone, no American critic seriously doubts that President Wilson is striving today, as he has always striven, to advance what he considers to be the best...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A WORD TO THE WISE. | 5/19/1919 | See Source »

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