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Word: mirroring (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

Those words were not some perverse message smeared in lipstick across a rest-room mirror. They were posted on the volunteers' bulletin board of America Online's genealogy site, typed by G. Marie Leaner, a communications consultant in Chicago, looking for her family roots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Genealogy: Roots Mania | 4/19/1999 | See Source »

According to the NCAVP, national numbers mirror the rend in Massachusetts. Nationwide, the number of serious injuries to gays resulting from attacks increased by 12 percent while the number of incidents of violence of harassment against gays decreased by 4 percent...

Author: By Edward B. Colby, CONTRIBUTING WRITTER | Title: Survey: Violence Against Gays May Have Risen | 4/15/1999 | See Source »

...tell you the truth--ever since the legendary astrologer Patric Walker died I..." and we're prepared for something fantastic and mystical, like "I can't walk under a ladder without a black cat falling into my Prada purse" or "I threw a Manolo Blahnik mule at a mirror and haven't been able to find comfortable shoes for seven years." But instead she finishes with "I don't look at my horoscope as much as I used to." Okay, maybe flying all the way to Milan only to act like a human clothes hanger for 16 hours...

Author: By Jessica A. Nordell, | Title: Will the Real Jane Pratt Please Stand Up? | 4/15/1999 | See Source »

...surfaced two weeks ago on the Senate floor, when only 16 Republicans voted to support the NATO air strikes. "To say Republicans are uneasy about this is an understatement," says a top G.O.P. official on Capitol Hill. "This is a party that likes to think of itself as the mirror image of those antiwar protesters who undermined those American boys in Vietnam. But because the situation is so volatile and the President hasn't laid out an endgame, it's hard to react...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The First Big Test | 4/12/1999 | See Source »

Science fiction is a fun-house mirror for a society warped by raging technological advance. Science fiction doesn't want or need to make much sense. It seeks astonishment, terror, wonder, ecstasy and dread. It is spectacular and mythic, an oxygen tent for society's daydreams. Science fiction cordially ignores many vital technologies, such as, say, garbage recycling. Recycling is hugely important, but it has zero science-fictional thrill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Century Of Science Fiction | 3/29/1999 | See Source »

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