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Word: lapping (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...solid bronze are used. . . . Metal tire covers are prominent. . . . Radically modern for Brewster was a Rolls-Royce body with everything, including doors, slanting sharply backward. This Rolls-Royce cost $21,750, was the most expensive car. Next was an $18,600 Isotta. . . . Adjustable "Pullman" seats were in evidence. . . . Rugs, lap robes and pillows (some of lambskin) blended with upholstery. . . . Some sport phaetons have a duplicate dashboard for rear-seat riders. . . . Exhibitors were hopeful Hollywood cinemastars will approve of the lavishness of the models, to be displayed in Los Angeles the first week in February, the Salon's next stop...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Body Salon | 12/15/1930 | See Source »

...crinkly hair pushed out above his handlebars. The crowds, always emphatically Italian in Manhattan, cheered Linari & Binda, billed as an imported road team, but they yelled loudest for their favorites, Franco Georgetti and Paul Brocardo. When the last hour began, Brocardo & Georgetti were riding desperately to keep a one-lap lead over two young Belgians, Adolph Charlier and Roger De Nef. Strong, ambitious, daring, Charlier & De Nef were in every jam, always dangerous, took three times as many points for sprints as anyone else. But in that last hour of a race in which there had been many accidents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Ride to Nowhere | 12/15/1930 | See Source »

...first lap of Paderewski's nationwide tour. He has played to record-breaking audiences all the way from Portland, Me. to Chicago and East again, attracted hundreds who would never think of listening to other pianists. In Philadelphia he had to have the piano pushed offstage before his audience would leave the hall. Like Conductor Arturo Toscanini (TIME, Nov. 24) Paderewski is this year in the U. S. without his wife for the first time. Mme Paderewska is ill of an incurable disease in Switzerland...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: First Lap | 12/1/1930 | See Source »

...intelligentsia of Tulane University. Somebody told him he should be an artist. So Douglas Brown became an artist. Scorning art schools, he invented his own technique. Scorning easels, palettes and other effete appurtenances, he paints crosslegged on the ground with his picture on a piece of cardboard in his lap...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Water Color Man | 11/24/1930 | See Source »

...Senator was quoted: "The entire matter is one of justification. Thousands of these colored boys came to Chicago from the South. . . . They had a kind of an idea they could sit in your lap or do anything they pleased...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RACES: Thompson v. McCormicks | 11/3/1930 | See Source »

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