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

...franchised chain we are responsible to buy certain products that have a certain name. We order from dairy farms and we have our corporate link through them from Ben & Jerry’s. Our syrups and baked goods come from them as well. But with sprinkles, milk, syrup, heavy cream, we have certain leeway,” she said...

Author: By Shifra B. Mincer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Price Isn't Right | 2/28/2006 | See Source »

...thoughts. Whereas cognitive therapists speak of "cognitive errors" and "distorted interpretations," Hayes and the others teach mindfulness, the meditation-inspired practice of observing thoughts without getting entangled in them, approaching them as though they were leaves floating down a stream ("... I want coffee/I should work out/I'm depressed/We need milk ..."). Hayes is the most divisive and ambitious of the third-wave psychologists-so called because they are turning from the second wave of cognitive therapy, which itself largely subsumed the first wave of behavior therapy, devised in part by B.F. Skinner. (Behavior therapy, in turn, broke with the Freudian model...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Third Wave of Therapy | 2/13/2006 | See Source »

Hayes' reputation as more mystagogue than scientist is reinforced partly by how he and his colleagues teach ACT workshops: they do the hard science, but they also ask the participating therapists, usually roomfuls of Ph.D.s, to do things like repeat the word milk over and over (to show how meaningless words can become-try it with I'm depressed). And although Hayes teaches mindfulness at ACT workshops around the world, he epitomizes "the absent-minded professor," according to Barlow, the psychologist who taught Hayes at Brown in the '70s. Hayes is famous at Nevada-Reno for passing students...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Third Wave of Therapy | 2/13/2006 | See Source »

...says seven-year Toscanini’s veteran Michael L. Krondel, who finds “nothing at all” wrong with the ad campaign. And fellow employee Elize Casarjian defends marketing caffeine to college students. “In theory, every drink is bad for you; milk, for example, rots your teeth.” But some of Tosca’s patrons don’t like the new ads. “Coffee should be savored for its taste, not for the caffeine,” says Louis K. Kang ’09, who feels...

Author: By Christina G. Vangelakos, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Toscanini's Brews Up an About Face | 2/8/2006 | See Source »

...have to respect that there is a balance to things and we’re not in a position to take away whole milk from you because there are some people who may need or want it,” she said. “It’s really about choice...

Author: By Laura A. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Got Whole Milk? Not These Cambridge Kids | 2/6/2006 | See Source »

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