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Word: kitchener (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...Dave [Harvard squash coach Dave fish] looked at me," Robie remembers, "changed my swing, and taught me what seemed like a million new things about squash After throwing the kitchen sink at me, he let me digest it, and four years later I'm playing great squash...

Author: By John Rippey, | Title: Mitch Reese and Chip Robie | 3/11/1982 | See Source »

Mary Sue Brancato said she saw a newspaper ad for a two bedroom apartment with "sunny kitchen" in Belmont for $300 per month. But Rentell Inc.. the rental service which ran the ad, would show her the listing for the apartment only after she paid a $75 registration...

Author: By Jennifer E. Lim, | Title: State Presses Suit Against Cambridge Firm Advertising Apartments For Sale in City. | 3/9/1982 | See Source »

Brancato paid the fee, but when she looked at the listings, she found not the apartment she wanted, but a flat in Watertown for $340 per month, with a kitchen that consisted of a microwave oven...

Author: By Jennifer E. Lim, | Title: State Presses Suit Against Cambridge Firm Advertising Apartments For Sale in City. | 3/9/1982 | See Source »

...other direction. Apparently unsure of his ability to convey the proper atmosphere, he also sends to overemphasize. After Jamie's biggest scare, Brandon comes over to her house to comfort her. While she sits in the hot tub, her troubles oozing away. Brandon fixes a snack in the kitchen. Meanwhile, Derek lurks in the bushes, watching all. When Brandon finishes slicing some cheese with a knife better suited to slicing through jungle, he rams the instrument into the remaining cheese block. Schmoeller cuts away, but he can't resist coming back and lingering on the knife in the cheese...

Author: By Michael Bass, | Title: The Morgan Guarantee | 3/9/1982 | See Source »

Worst of all. America's money miseries have become the ghoulish flipside to the Good Life. For cash-squeezed consumers by the millions, shopping on credit for everything from a new suit of clothing, to cars, kitchen appliances, even a roof over one's head, is increasingly painful. Indeed, by the common consent of economists, towering interest rates have done more than any other single factor to drive the U.S. into a recession that still threatens to push unemployment to a post-World War II high...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Paying More for Money | 3/8/1982 | See Source »

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