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Word: pythonism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...very smart person once pointed out that if you win the rat race, you’re still a rat. Probably a very rich, well-connected rat, which is much more than my current path of sitting with a pencil will bring. But being the python that plucks the guilt strings of the rat is always fun. As is being the python that eats the rat in a surprise, late-life attack...

Author: By Arianne R. Cohen, | Title: Pythons and Rats | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

Success is good, but python-style success is better. Or at least worth writing about...

Author: By Arianne R. Cohen, | Title: Pythons and Rats | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

...emerged from the opening, a Queen's Indian Defense, with an advantage. But the position was complex and sharp, with the queens still on the board, and that's what the wily machine likes. Kramnik could have improved the placement of his pieces, slowly strangling Fritz with the python-like play that had succeeded in the first half of the match. But in a sign of possible trouble, he took an uncharacteristically long time on his fourteenth move ("Vlad thinking here is not a good omen for those rooting for living creatures," said Russian grand master Peter Svidler...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Brains in Bahrain': Kramnik Tries to Be a Viper | 10/15/2002 | See Source »

...This is going to be good," said international master William Paschall. "This is the kind of fighting chess you want to see. Vlad the Python has become Vlad the Viper. He wants to take the machine out tactically. He can't resist the temptation to try to beat the computer at its own game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Brains in Bahrain': Kramnik Tries to Be a Viper | 10/15/2002 | See Source »

...apartment building that Leo Sabarsky, a painter, has just moved into. There he meets Jonathan Rush, a secretive, Salman Rushdie-like writer whose latest book incites riots. Completing the traditional arts, Angel, a musician who can make stones sing, lives there too. Mixing Ingmar Bergman with Monty Python, strange, vaguely metaphorical characters pop in and out. Pudgy, bowler-hatted men regularly visit the writer to collect anything that he loves, giving them over to a mad doctor who dissects the objects, looking for their soul. The painter receives a visit from a mute gallery owner who keeps word-cards...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Life, the Universe and Sequential Art | 8/27/2002 | See Source »

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