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Word: predictible (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Dangerous or not, cell phones have taken off, especially in sales to kids. Within four years, experts predict, 2 out of 3 in the 10-to-19 age group in the U.S. will have their own cell phone. Children want them because they allow for independence and sociability. Parents like the phones because the gadgets allow them to keep tabs on their offspring...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cell Phones For Children: Are Kids at Greater Risk? | 1/15/2001 | See Source »

...difficult to predict the economic situations that Lindsey will encounter in the upcoming year, says IBM Professor of Business and Government Roger B. Porter...

Author: By S. CHARTEY Quarcoo, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: From Sanders Theatre to the West Wing | 1/12/2001 | See Source »

...these groups manage to turn up substantial heat under Ashcroft (as some observers predict they will), Bush will face a crisis of faith, so to speak. Will he stand by his man, absorbing the political body blows as a form of payback to the right-wing religious organizations that secured his election? Or will he eventually decide that defending Ashcroft's potentially divisive record could cost more political capital than he's willing to lose so early in the game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: John Ashcroft: The Man the Left Loves to Hate | 1/12/2001 | See Source »

...knowledge, in the tradition of Berkeley and Hume, based on radical empiricism: that everything we can know about the world derives only from our sensory perceptions and that anything else we might think exists--ranging from physical objects to metaphysical beliefs--is merely a mental construct that may help predict our perceptions but cannot be known as objectively true; in Boston. His seminal 1951 essay "Two Dogmas of Empiricism" and 1960 book Word and Object built upon the works of such logical positivists as Rudolf Carnap and A.J. Ayer to place him just a notch below Wittgenstein in the pantheon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Jan. 8, 2001 | 1/8/2001 | See Source »

...United-USAirways deal is monopolistic. Some experts are unimpressed by this move. "United is throwing Justice a bone," says Richard Gritta, professor of finance at the University of Portland's R. B. Pamplin School of Business. That bone - and an incoming business-friendly administration - could be enough; analysts predict relatively laissez-faire antitrust efforts at Justice...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Post-Merger Airfares: Up, Up and Away? | 1/8/2001 | See Source »

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