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Word: jawings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...lean, saddle-brown man who has lived all of his 50 years on Edwards Plateau and runs a sheep and cattle ranch near the little town of Menard (pop. 2,000). Last week Wilhelm looked out across the gaunt and tortured hills of his range and stubbornly set his jaw...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TEXAS: The Unhappy Land | 4/23/1956 | See Source »

Stricken with cancer of the jaw in later years, Freud was an uncomplaining patient. Often invited to leave Vienna (which he insisted he hated, so his staying there through 60 years of adult life cried aloud for a candid Freudian explanation), he stuck it out through the inflation after World War I and the advent of the Nazis. He even tried to stay when the Nazis marched in (March 1938). With such ill-assorted allies as the British Home Office (unanalyzed) and Princess Marie Bonaparte (analyzed to a fare-thee-well by Sigmund Freud himself), Ernest Jones flew in after...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Explorer | 4/23/1956 | See Source »

...station where he faced a seemingly endless climb to reach the street, a calloused cop who thought that Beal was drunk, not sick, and finally the cold ministrations of the hospital staff. But Beal's own remarkable performance told most of the story: his tautened body and hanging jaw gave an eerie impression of the tempests raging inside his rib cage, and his wildly questing eyes had all the shocked horror of a man who has looked into eternity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: The Week in Review | 4/9/1956 | See Source »

Both were at a meeting of anthropology scholars in New York a week ago Saturday when Johannes Hurzeler, a Swiss paleontologist, lectured on his thesis that Oreopithecus, a creature whose fossilized jaw-bone was found in 1872, was more human-like than ape-like...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Darwin Theory Still Intact, Two Anthropologists Affirm | 3/13/1956 | See Source »

...beads (though himself an Anglican), and walk hand in hand in Eastern fashion with Abdullah in the King's garden. During interminable parleys with desert sheiks, he would pick imaginary lice from his burnoose to make his guests feel at home. Called Abu Huneik (Father of the Little Jaw) because of a bullet wound incurred on the Western front in World War I, he molded his loyal tribesmen into a hard-disciplined force of 20,000 men that helped to save Iraq from a pro-Nazi revolt in World War II and alone among Arab armies stood...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JORDAN: The Passing of the Proconsul | 3/12/1956 | See Source »

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