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

...given Harvard’s wealth of genuine sports fans—people who sacrifice grades for the baseball playoffs and lament lack of SportsCenter in dorms—the empty seats that suggest that Harvard sports aren’t “the real thing” to their fans are a shame...

Author: By Martin S. Bell, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: Saved by the Bell: Princeton Fans Take Sports More Seriously | 10/28/2002 | See Source »

...pitfalls of a work like Winterreise is that too often it is performed as a single, unrelenting lament. The singer is so tortured that by the end, his meeting with a stone-faced organ grinder does not have nearly the chilling impact that it should. And while this work is all about excessive emotions, an excessive display can hurt its credibility. Van Dam never overplayed the Werther-like persona of the narrator. He avoided the indulgent self-pity that lends itself easily to the work. The cycle as a whole, while overwhelmingly dark, has moments of repose, fragmentary glimpses...

Author: By Anthony Cheung, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: A Winter's Tale | 10/24/2002 | See Source »

...Chavez is still a reminder of the late Nobel author Octavio Paz's lament that Latin America's revolutions are inevitably "squandered in violent agitation." His 1998 landslide election overthrew one of the world's most rotten political systems, but he seems incorrigibly wedded to a bellicose and autocratic style that many fear could eventually evolve into a left-wing dictatorship like Cuba's. Chavez recently threatened to seize businesses that close for whole days to protest his erratic government. His neighborhood organizations, the Bolivarian Circles, do aid the poor, but they sometimes morph into armed gangs like the ones...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hugo's Crude Common Ground With America | 10/12/2002 | See Source »

...become a dirty word, an insult on par with “belligerent aggressor” and a refrain of choice for critics of the present administration. We hear, from European politicians and American intellectuals, a ceaseless jeremiad about the dangers of unilateral U.S. action. Consider, for example, the lament of Peter Kilfoyle, a member of the British parliament, in his recent op-ed in The Crimson. After deciding that Islamic terrorism is the result of globalization and the polarization of the “haves” and the “have-nots” (itself a curious...

Author: By Jason L. Steorts, | Title: In Defense of Unilateralism | 9/23/2002 | See Source »

...knew what to call it at first, so the numbers became the name. On this 9/11 there will be bells and bagpipes and a rolling requiem of choirs singing Mozart from time zone to time zone, circling the globe with love and lament. But for the 11 people TIME has followed this year, it may be just another day: for a girl in New Jersey without her dad, a day of avoiding the news; for a girl in Pakistan with divided loyalties, a day of avoiding her friends. For a commando in Afghanistan and a Customs inspector in Detroit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Eleven Lives | 9/9/2002 | See Source »

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