Word: proofing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Swimming Upstream” is proof that Fingleton hasn’t lost any nerve since his champion tournament days: overseeing the production process, Fingleton had to plumb the depths of his childhood pain...
...presented me with a creepy Olsen-twinsesque beast. That oversized head, doe, drugged-out eyes, and sharp physique was certainly not the pony that I galloped around my bedroom mountains.When the ’80s toy revolution began a year or two ago, I was elated. Finally, proof that it wasn’t only my own Peter-Pan-complexed self that believed these playthings were far superior to the more technologically advanced but ultimately soulless products of today. Certainly this decision was probably, in part, based on the fact that the ’80s children are just starting...
...your choice of friends, bookstores, magazines and professors, you may have heard that the novel is ailing, dying, or dead. If so, rest easy: you have been misinformed. “The Line of Beauty,” by Alan Hollinghurst, was last year’s undeniable proof that truly magnificent novels are still alive and kicking—or, in the case of “The Line,” singing.And if any doubt about the vitality of the novel lingers in your mind, such skepticism will be washed away next Friday, Oct. 28, when Hollinghurst reads...
...purchasers in Boston may soon need to bring proof of address as well as an ID to the liquor store if a new ordinance regulating keg sales is passed, as expected, on Thursday. Boston City Councilor-At-Large and Chairman of Public Safety on the Boston City Council Stephen J. Murphy proposed the move in September in a bid to curb excessive drinking, particularly by students. The ordinance will require all liquor stores in the Boston area to report the names, addresses and birthdates of anyone buying a keg to the Boston Police Department (BPD). Right now, keg sales...
...many students in the College have even a passing familiarity with the Uighurs? Not many, if their reading habits are any indication. What Guren does not mention, but which is devastating proof of his point, is that, for want of students to use it, Hilles Library is now being gutted to make spacious meeting rooms for student clubs with two members...