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Word: mountainize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...great roar of approval from critics and gentle readers. At that time Author Kennedy was not long out of Somerville College, Oxford, where she sang in Sir Hugh Allen's famed Oxford Bach Choir. Author Kennedy dislikes games & most violent exercise, likes swimming, dancing (hornpipes or foxtrots), mountain climbing. Her husband is David Davies, onetime secretary to famed Herbert H. Asquith...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FICTION: Red Sky | 11/21/1927 | See Source »

...peak, and which lost two of its daring climbers, Mallory and Irvine. The world waited in breathless suspense for news of victory over the highest peak on the face of the earth: but instead came the news of defeat and death, the climax of the greatest known mountain expedition...

Author: By John DELAITTRE ., | Title: Spread Eagle -- Mt. Everest | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

...regarded as an excellent authority on what actually happened. His new book gives a human account of all the exploration that has ever taken place in the region of Mt. Everest in southern Tibet. Going back to the discovery in 1852 that "Peak XV," 29145 feet, was the highest mountain in the world, Captain Noel tells of the disguised surveyors who spent years in the monasteries of old Nepal and Tibet gathering bit by bit accurate information as to the exact surroundings of the "Goddess Mother of the World". In 1914 Noel made an attempt to see the mountain...

Author: By John DELAITTRE ., | Title: Spread Eagle -- Mt. Everest | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

...personal friendship between Sir Charles Bell and the Dalai Lama of Lhasa. In 1922 the first expedition made an in-road on the desired region, mapping the surroundings, gained knowledge of the weather and choosing a route up the peak. A few poor attempts were made on the mountain itself, but these were abruptly ended by the death of several porters in an avalanche...

Author: By John DELAITTRE ., | Title: Spread Eagle -- Mt. Everest | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

Preparations were made for a 1924 expedition; elaborate and expensive equipment was collected, but the great question was whether or not oxygen should be used on the mountain for climbing. Norton and Somervell were opposed, and finally made the world's record ascent without oxygen tanks, reaching 28,200 feet. Mallory and Irvine next tried with the aid of oxygen to reach the summit. Through a rift in the clouds Odell saw them 600 feet from the summit, but beyond that we know nothing of these two unfortunate mountaineers...

Author: By John DELAITTRE ., | Title: Spread Eagle -- Mt. Everest | 11/19/1927 | See Source »

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