Word: nicest
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...result, instead of seeking out adults for advice, students often to fellow students. That is healthy and as it should be. But when I was talking with friends the other day, we all noticed that a lot of people at Harvard, even the nicest ones, don't always have time to listen to your day. Often, we're all so caught up writing our next paper or finishing our latest extracurricular task that, even when we really want to listen to a friend, we end up half-listening while making a mental list of everything we have...
...sweetest, gentlest, nicest person in the whole world," Frank said. "He seemed shy, but once you started talking to him he would open up, and he just knew the most amazing things, and really had a love for the things he was learning...
...Ansgar was the nicest person I've ever met," said Eric Giroux '97, who met Hansen as a first-year. "He was also one of the most sincere intellectuals and scholors that I've ever met at Harvard...
...shopkeeper's daughter, forced by her parents to return home every night lest she be lost to the moral ambiguities of college life, she is lusted after by her father's at first comically creepy, then dangerous clerk (Alan Cumming) and truly loved by, of all people, the cutest, nicest guy on campus (Chris O'Donnell). It shouldn't work, this romance between the ruffled duckling and the swan prince, but it does. Their sweet, determined, gently understated struggle for fulfillment in a superstitiously conservative society makes this densely, deftly packed movie a quiet joy to behold...
...this coming-of-age comedy based on a Maeve Binchy novel, the cutest, nicest guy at Dublin's Trinity College (Chris O'Donnell) falls in love with a convent-educated country shopkeeper's daughter (Minnie Driver). To him, she's beautiful, no matter how ungainly she thinks she is. And she sees beyond his good looks to the insecure and awkward boy beneath the facade. "Their sweet, determined, gently understated struggle for fulfillment in a superstitiously conservative society makes this movie a quiet joy to behold," says TIME critic Richard Schickel...