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Word: knocks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...fading and passengers on London?s buses looked a bit more comfortable in their seats. Riding into town from Hammersmith, teenage girls chattered brightly on the bottom deck and finally exited in a fit of giggles. It was almost business as usual. On any other day the sharp knock at the back of the bus as it approached Piccadilly Circus might have been interpreted as something mundane: an umbrella hitting the floor, a high heel?s clatter. Today it provoked a panic for one woman seated in the back row of the lower floor. She looked around anxiously...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Back to Work | 7/8/2005 | See Source »

...Side and the rough-and-ready section known as East Van. How times have changed. Successive waves of artists, media types and other loft dwellers kicked off a gradual process of gentrification; the day young families started infiltrating its neighborhoods, East Van's journey to respectability was complete. One knock-on effect of this has been the tidying up of Main Street itself. Caf?s and galleries have mushroomed there; so have boutiques?particularly around 21st and Main. Now branded a "fashion district" by local style mavens, south Main, or "SoMa," is just what the shopping doctor ordered. Bound for Vancouver...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Give Me SoMa | 7/4/2005 | See Source »

...implement the President's Strategic Defense Initiative. Last Saturday at an under ground site in Pahute Mesa, Nev., northwest of Las Vegas, the U.S. exploded a device (code-named Goldstone) designed to channel the energy of a nuclear blast into a concentrated, powerful beam of X-rays that could knock out a missile or warhead. Indeed, it may have been the Soviets' fear of SDI that pushed the Kremlin to show some flexibility on verification, in the hope of winning a ban on future tests of such Star Wars technology...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Test-Ban Talks? The two sides show some give | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

Otherwise, they brood. Into their study every morning parade the armies of the news. A knock on the door, and there stands Heseltine resigning from Mrs. Thatcher's Cabinet, Marcos on the stump, Gaddafi playing cowboy on his tractor, mummied to the nose. Come in, boys. The columnist will make sense of all this somehow. After the reporters and the editors have dumped the facts on the doorstep, the columnist, like a jigsaw addict, scoops up the pieces, studies the angles, mulls, clears his throat and says, with as much self-assurance as possible: This piece goes here, and this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: The Death of a Columnist | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

...concern us," says Grant Winterton, Coca-Cola's regional manager for Russia, Ukraine and Belarus. The beverage titan knows the risks firsthand. Coca-Cola invested $800 million in the 1990s to build 11 plants in Russia and an extensive distribution system. The company's fortunes took a severe knock in 1998 when Russia was hit by a debt crisis and a massive devaluation of its currency. But since then, Coca-Cola's Russian operations have grown back to profitability, Winterton says, and it has half of Russia's $1.9 billion carbonated-soft-drink market. Thus, concludes Winterton, "the opportunity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Emerging Markets: A New Frontier | 6/20/2005 | See Source »

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