Word: kept
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...doing it again. Why did you get liposuction the second time? I have a lot of shame about that. The second time I had plastic surgery, I got it done for free. People was covering it, and I met a team of doctors that had a publicist who kept adding procedures. The guy who did my LASIK surgery wanted to do a "tune-up," and now I've had five surgeries on my eye. I have partial blindness in one of my eyes, actually. It was very much like Nip/Tuck, where they'd be like, "Tell me what...
Have you moved up to the C list yet? There's nothing I can ever do to get off the D list. I was working on some show and the sound guy was putting my microphone on, and he kept talking about when we'd worked together before, but none of it rang a bell. Finally it dawned on me and I said, "I think you're talking about someone else." And he went, "Oh yeah, sorry." If that happens, you know you're on the D list...
...outside the Utah town of Kanab. Harley, like many of the approximately 500 dogs at Best Friends - and many of the pigs, horses, birds, rabbits, mules and other animals who live there - was abandoned by his owners. Others had it worse. They were abused, used for fighting or kept in horrible conditions. But since they landed at Best Friends, the U.S.'s largest no-kill animal sanctuary, they found people willing to love and care for them, which, blessedly, allows people like you and me to adopt them for the day - or in some cases, for good...
...match on the next point. HARVARD 3, STONY BROOK 1 In its second match, the Crimson squared off against the Seawolves (1-6) and rolled to a 3-1 win. “We did awesome,” Weiss said. “We played really well and kept Stony Brook out of system.” Harvard gathered an early lead, winning the first two sets, 25-19 and 25-23, before dropping the third set, 25-20. In the fourth frame, the Crimson jumped out to a 10-3 lead and did not look back, winning...
...beating the heat became fashionable in the early to mid-20th century, says Charlie Scheips, author of American Fashion. "All the magazines and tastemakers were centered in big cities, usually in northern climates that had seasons," he notes. In the hot summer months, white clothing kept New York fashion editors cool. But facing, say, heavy fall rain, they might not have been inclined to risk sullying white ensembles with mud - and that sensibility was reflected in the glossy pages of Harper's Bazaar and Vogue, which set the tone for the country...