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Word: laughingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...Aren't others, as well, alarmed at his public debauch, at his joyous wallowing in the insensitive, at his brazen certainty that we all will join him, slapping our thighs as we screamingly laugh at his vulgar barbs? And for this poison to be lent an aura of legitimacy simply by its appearance in your pages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: May 3, 1963 | 5/3/1963 | See Source »

...Harvard's joint surgical departments, covering five hospitals; as director of a many faceted research program. There is even a trace of the thespian in the way he lectures-never still, always holding the students' eyes as well as their minds, somehow managing to draw a laugh with such lines as "the brain is an island in an osmotically homogeneous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Surgery: The Best Hope of All | 5/3/1963 | See Source »

...spiral of the Guggenheim Museum. Low-voiced and appreciative, they stand there taking notes for essays on an enormous painting that has an all-over pattern of gooey brown and a row of real, 3-in. buttons running down the middle. It is called Coat. The girls do not laugh. Coat is pop art. And pop art, much as it may outrage Pop, not to mention Grandpop, is the biggest fad since art belonged to Dada. Symposiums discuss it; art magazines debate it; galleries compete for it. Collectors, uncertain of their own taste, find pop art paintings ideal for their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Pop Art - Cult of the Commonplace | 5/3/1963 | See Source »

...case she has a right to one. I'll spot her ten years. My nose is the one I was born with, and I've never had my face lifted." As for Zsa Zsa's defending children's morals: "It may be the biggest laugh of the last 50 years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Apr. 26, 1963 | 4/26/1963 | See Source »

Either way, he is a man and a half. He has a wild mind with a living education in it. He is bright and perceptive to an alarming degree, a rare and dangerous thing in an actor. He laughs honestly. He lies winningly. He trusts absolutely, and he is as pretty as a hill of granite. He can make anyone laugh. He can talk a man under the table about literature, displaying huge sophistication and no cant. He reads rapidly, but he gives a book its due: a novel like Anglo-Saxon Attitudes costs him only two hours, but Moby...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Actors: The Man on the Billboard | 4/26/1963 | See Source »

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