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Word: neither (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
Sort By: most recent first (reverse)


Usage:

...close and exciting game Saturday afternoon the Harvard Freshman base-ball team defeated St. Mark's School at Southboro by the score of 5 to 3. For the first four innings neither side was able to score; but in the first half of the fifth, a base on balls, a sacrifice hit, a batter hit by a pitched ball, and two singles netted four runs for the Freshmen. In the last of the sixth St. Mark's secured two runs. The Freshmen started off their half of the eighth with one run, but the side was retired before any more...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: FRESHMEN, 5; ST. MARK'S, 3 | 4/29/1912 | See Source »

...outcome of all the games was to some degree due to the poor condition of the grounds. The work of the team, however, was fair and scoring was made possible in each game by the strength of the attack. In the game with Johns Hopkins the players on neither team were able to do their best because the field was soggy from the rain, which stopped just as the game began. The defence of the Maryland Agricultural College was strong and at the end of the first half of Monday's game the score was 4 to 0 in favor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: LACROSSE WORK IN RECESS | 4/22/1912 | See Source »

...Sick." Arthur Wilson's "By a Window" contains one epithet which justifies it. I do not believe that Schofield Thayer's "Amica" exists in his imagination, much less in his experience; she is only a creature of his vocabulary. J. D. Adams's "The Greater Sunlight" conveys to me neither image nor idea nor emotion. The use of the word "lambent" should be forbidden to Monthly poets for the space of one year. When they apply it to worlds, it is too much. The two stanzas by the new president of the Monthly seem to be worth all the rest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CURRENT MONTHLY REVIEW | 4/10/1912 | See Source »

...gentlemen politicians"; but from rather an illogical premise that "politics should be a career and not a business", the writer quickly comes to earth and emphasizes the paucity of political discussion in the University. We have, as he says, the Taft Club and the La Follette Club, but neither organization takes the trouble to discuss in open debate with the other the merits of its particular candidate; much less to meet the members of the Democratic Clubs or the Socialist Club. In the light of such conditions it seems superfluous, to say the least, that the Corporation should recently have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Current Advocate | 4/4/1912 | See Source »

...best, verse translation is an exquisite art: at its worst it is padded prose. Neither "The Swashbuckler's Song" from the Greek nor "Reverie" from Victor Hugo's French seems in its present form songful enough to justify the labor of the translator...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Review of Current Advocate | 4/4/1912 | See Source »

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