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Word: profoundly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...from his deluding passion. But like everything else in this sidelong glance of a movie, that point is, at most, implied. He has a long road to travel before he finds the freedom to respond to life as Rohmer does-with a wry sigh. The director of such wittily profound films as My Night at Maud's, Claire's Knee and The Marquise of O . . ., Rohmer has long since established himself as one of film's most assured miniaturists. This latest meditation on romantic absurdity is one of his most approachable and overtly comic works. -By Richard...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Wry Sigh | 10/12/1981 | See Source »

...fact is especially salient because the Angels are not favorites of the police, who do not enjoy being shown up in their line of work. The Angels carry no weapons and can only make citizens arrests. The leap of imagination between these kids and Mussolini's brown shirts seems profound indeed...

Author: By --michael W. Miller, | Title: A Fair Chance | 10/7/1981 | See Source »

...foremost authority on anxiety" immediately remind one of the rash of self-help books so abundant during the last few years. But in opening paragraph of his preface, Wolpe assures us that his book is not of that genre, revealing his true motive in a voice filled with profound eloquence: "These offshoots of behavior therapy are like the uppermost branches of a tree, visible above a mist." He expounds further: "The trunk and lower branches remain hidden from view: no clear, easily accessible, and authoritative description has been available to the public. This book is an attempt to provide that...

Author: By Wendy L.wall, | Title: Boo! | 9/30/1981 | See Source »

...Constitutional Law, replete with metaphors for an eight-year-old. "You can't turn the law into a straightjacket," feisty liberal Justice Dan Snow (Walter Matthau) tells arch-conservative bench-mate Ruth Loomis (Jill Clayburgh). "It must be a suit of clothes you can move around in." With this profound thought as a guideline, the movie dashes madly from issue to issue, like a tourist with an hour to spend on all of the national monuments. But the camera never wanders too far from Matthau and Clayburgh, as they duke it out over everything from dirty films to women...

Author: By Elizabeth A. Marek, | Title: A New Sister | 9/24/1981 | See Source »

Burnout may be the late 20th century descendant of neurasthenia and the nervous breakdown-the wonderfully matter-of-fact all-purpose periodic collapse that our parents were fond of. Burnout is preeminently the disease of the thwarted; it is a frustration so profound that it exhausts body and morale. Burnout, in advanced states, imposes a fatigue that seems-at the time-a close relative of death. It is the entropy of the other-directed. Even the best worker-especially the best worker-will often, when thwarted, swallow his rage; it then turns into a small private conflagration, the fire...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: The Burnout of Almost Everyone | 9/21/1981 | See Source »

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