Word: jawed
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...assigned to look after a lady correspondent (Eva Gabor), who is all too easily persuaded to part with her panties, which are next seen fluttering from the halyards as the ship goes into battle. "Ggrrulfskrggrowlk!" roars the admiral, but a seaman standing by reminds him, with a jaw squared in patriotism, "Sir, that's what we're fighting...
...Autobiography, Lay Analysis; The Future of an Illusion; Civilization and its Discontents; New Introductory Lectures; Why War?, and Moses and Monotheism. This record of production is made even more impressive by the fact that the last sixteen years of his life were made physically miserable by cancer of the jaw, for which he underwent 33 operations. Freud had to wear a prosthesis, an artificial palate, which could never be made to fit comfortably, and which distorted his speech and face. His physical pain was compounded in this period by personal tragedies: the deaths of his daughter Sophie, his grandson...
Shelvey suffered multiple cuts and bruises, a severe concussion, a broken jaw, and a badly sprained wrist. His condition was termed quite serious" by Dr. Tan after the preliminary examination on Thursday evening, but by late Sunday evening, Shelvey had regained consciousness, and Dr. Tan told the News this morning that his chances of recovery were "excellent...
Shelvey was found shortly after midnight lying helpless in the alley. Police rushed him straight to the hospital, where he was treated for a concussion, a broken jaw, a sprained wrist, and multiple cuts and bruises. Although he remained unconscous for more than twenty-four hours, his chances for recovery were termed "excellent" by Dr. P. C. Tan, police surgeon...
Aside from lack of money, the deprivation that most troubled Freud in postwar Vienna involved cigars. Imported ones were unobtainable in near-bankrupt Austria, so visiting analysts smuggled them in. Though he knew that his jaw cancer might have been caused by smoking, Freud would not quit on that account. With his shrunken tissues and "the monster" interfering, he sometimes had to pry his mouth open with a clothespin to get the cigar in. Even so, he enjoyed up to four a day. At one time, when he had heart trouble marked by anginal pain, he quit smoking and boasted...