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Word: jamaican (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...gourmet coffee is a wine for the nineties. There is the snobbery about country of origin, the niggling distinctions about process of preparation, and the gratuitous use of descriptive yet totally inaccurate adjectives to distinguish flavor. The coffee illuminati can sip their Kenya AA or $30-per-pound Jamaican Blue Mountain while they debate the comparative merit of washed and dry-milled beans with an air of enlightened self-satisfaction...

Author: By Benjamin J. Heller, | Title: Square Cafes: The Bitter Reality | 11/13/1993 | See Source »

While an instructor at Howard, she married a Jamaican architect named Harold Morrison and had two sons. As the marriage turned sour, Morrison began to seek privacy and consolation in writing, like, as she later remarked, "someone with a dirty habit." One of the stories she produced, about a little black girl who prays to be given blue eyes so that others will find her beautiful, later inspired her first novel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rooms of Their Own | 10/18/1993 | See Source »

There's a whiff of ganja in the air as Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers take the stage of Manhattan's Academy theater under a backdrop of painted African masks. The band launches into a chugging Jamaican groove, and the young crowd that has filled the house churns and bobs to the buoyant, upside- down beat. Midway through the show the Melody Makers break into an impassioned rendition of the Bob Marley classic I Shot the Sheriff and then segue into the blistering grind of Head Top, from their strong new album Joy and Blues. As Ziggy, 24, rekindles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marley's Ghost | 9/13/1993 | See Source »

...Marley, a poor Jamaican from Kingston's Trenchtown slum, who brought reggae to international prominence in the '70s with his albums Catch a Fire, Rastaman Vibration and Exodus. An outspoken champion of racial equality and social justice, Marley was also a tireless promoter of Rastafarianism, the pro-African sect whose followers grow their hair into long, matted dreadlocks and smoke marijuana, or ganja, as part of a religious rite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Marley's Ghost | 9/13/1993 | See Source »

Colin Powell is more than just a prominent Black figure. He is a living embodiment of the American success story. The son of Jamaican immigrants, General Powell never acquired the cachet of West Point or Annapolis (the military's Ivy League). Instead, he graduated from the City College of New York and went on to become a war hero in Vietnam. He is the first Black man to be appointed Head of the Joint Chiefs. Think about that for a second--what it must be like to be the first Black anything in this country. Whether you're the first...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Critics of Powell are Practicing Intolerance | 4/26/1993 | See Source »

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