Word: knittedness
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When World War II came, Edith knitted socks, while listening to Debussy on her wind-up gramophone and downing large tumblers of gin. The Sitwell legend that had persevered since World War I seemed ready for retirement, along with the Empire.
Harris will arrive in handcuffs, as required by prison regulations, and cross a reception area containing glass cases filled with prisoner handicrafts such as pottery and knitted baby clothes. After she has been photographed, fingerprinted and given a medical exam, she will stay in the reception block for at least...
Putnam supplies yarn to 25 or so knitters, who work at home on machines they buy from manufacturers for $350 and up. Each worker is paid, in venerable cottage-industry fashion, by the piece. The knitters seem to like the arrangement just fine. The U.S. Department of Labor does not...
(11 of 11) intrinsically human, such as sports, entertainment, scientific research." The value of many things will eventually change, since every thing made by machine will come to seem commonplace and everything made by hand, even a pair of knitted socks, will acquire the quality of rarity.
The description she gave the inspector at the Park St. station was that of a black man, "Five-foot-nine, wearing a black knitted cap, and that's about all that I had said." The description offered no discussion of his build.