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

...police, who arranged for the airing of the confession, were at first skeptical of Pichuzkin's stories. But three of the homeless men he chucked into the sewer survived; and one was lucid enough to identify Pichuzkin and to corroborate his modus operandi. And Pichuzkin's final victim - a co-worker at his grocery store - was skeptical enough about his tale of wanting to show her his dog's grave in the park that she told her son where she was going and gave him Pichuzkin's cellphone number. Pichuzkin was also caught on a subway surveillance cameras with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Grandmaster of Murder? | 9/12/2007 | See Source »

...evaluated. By the 1970s, the sheer quantity of mediocre boxy office buildings had given the style a bad name. The history of architecture since then has been largely an effort to find a way out of that aesthetic dead end. Still, the enduring virtues of Modernism--clean lines and lucid structure--have been carried into the present by architects like Norman Foster and Richard Rogers. Meanwhile the furniture and graphics of the era are as hot as they've ever been. And in buildings by such marquee names as Richard Meier and Jean Nouvel, austere glass and steel have even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Splendor in the Glass | 6/28/2007 | See Source »

...science class, a very animated young professor delivers a dazzling lecture on electromagnetism. He paces around the front, gesticulating enthusiastically while talking to the audience and writing large, clear equations on the blackboard. The instructor is a charismatic presenter, articulate and energetic, and his lecture is clear and lucid...

Author: By Eric Mazur | Title: Reflections on a Harvard Education | 6/6/2007 | See Source »

...merely cognitive fragments nor a succession of chaotic images, but so story-like, sequential and dramatic that the thinking brain must surely have played a more substantial role in their production than the last-minute editing of a pile of neural bloopers. And there's the matter of lucid dreaming, in which people become aware in the course of a dream that they are, in fact, dreaming, and are able to control the course of events-a phenomenon that strengthens the case for higher-brain involvement in dream construction. The lucid dreamer can apparently apply certain techniques to prolong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: While You Were Sleeping | 4/5/2007 | See Source »

...London's 19th-century Crystal Palace, a place as stripped down and functional as a suspension bridge, but also from the Expressionism of Erich Mendelsohn, the German architect who brought a sensual component to Modernism. What Rogers arrived at was a way to make high tech not just lucid but surprising. Modernism expelled applied ornament. But by making an explosive aesthetic use of the raw, unadorned elements of a building, Rogers showed that, all by itself, the elemental could be ornamental...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turning Buildings Inside Out | 3/29/2007 | See Source »

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