Word: monstrously
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Cornell's Duanne Moeser and Yale's Randy Wood still have two Ivy games left to play. but with 14 points apiece each would need monstrous efforts to pass Fusco, who averaged two-and-a-half points per game in the Ivy League...
THANKS, Berke Breathed for your portrayal last Friday of a "radical feminist," as a monstrous man-hater guiltily lusting after Sly Stallone. Maybe next week, if we're lucky, we'll get to meet a real live Black person--who you'd no doubt have sporting numerous gold-chains and wielding a switch-blade. Or maybe you'll give us a puffed-chested hispanic showing off his new Cadillac...
Harris plays the phoniest, deadliest and most seductive figure in the clan, fluttering her eyelashes and flinging her hands up in merry confusion every time she gives another derailing shove to the rules of common courtesy. Her monstrous misbehavior is accompanied by an elfin, confessional grin calculated to excuse a multitude of sins. As her novelist husband, Roy Dotrice uses dottiness as an excuse for complete indifference to those around him: at teatime he fills and sips from cup after cup until he is surrounded by soiled china, then passes tea and edibles to each member of his family while...
Today Gillette is a monstrous international conglomerate with plants from Johannesburg to Munich. The company does over $2 billion dollars of business every year, selling products that range from luxury fountain pens to ladies deodorant. Fully one third of the corporation's business, however, remains in the bedrock blades and razors division: the action end of the shaving process accounts for one third of Gillette's total sales and two thirds of its profit. The company dominates the U.S. shaving market supplying 60 percent of the country's blades and 70 percent of its razors--that's 1.3 billion blade...
...discussion." Charles threw a rock through the plate-glass window of modern architecture last year when he decried the sterility of much contemporary British design. In a speech to the Royal Institute of British Architects, he castigated a proposed steel- and-glass addition to the National Gallery as "a monstrous carbuncle on the * face of a much-loved and elegant friend...