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Word: quiverers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...Church of the Covenant, Al Pacino's Richard could be taken for a failed Mafia assassin seeking asylum. The left sleeve of his green knit pullover bunches around some unspeakable wound of a hand. The yarn in the shoulder stretches obscenely over his hump. His cheeks quiver with little tics. His lips pout in private arrangements of humor and rage. When he speaks, Elizabethan English seems to acquire a Sicilian accent: Shakespeare out of The Godfather...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: The Heroic Monster | 2/26/1973 | See Source »

...Frederic, in a fit of moral fervor, sneaks out the back door and rushes home to this wife like a sheepish criminal. Helene breaks out in a fit of weeping, suggesting that she too has been spending an illicit interlude. Frederic sweeps her off to bed a-quiver with righteous reaffirmation of his marriage vows...

Author: By Emily Fisher, | Title: Love in the Afternoon | 1/29/1973 | See Source »

...Nixon campaign teams in 1960 and 1968. There have been disturbing indications that Gray is not the wholly apolitical administrator that he now claims to be. Back in 1969, when he joined the Health, Education and Welfare Department, he told a meeting of Administration appointees, "Do not retch or quiver when we insist that the preponderant majority of our colleagues-political appointees-be members of our own party...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: Tattletale Gray | 1/15/1973 | See Source »

...slight quiver below my belt told...

Author: By Richard Dey, | Title: Visitations | 12/13/1972 | See Source »

...Meeting, a fatal and apparently meaningless duel between two gentlemen at a party takes on the significance of another sort of "meeting" across time. The two knives which are wielded in the fight seem to quiver, as if by their own energy, in the hands of the unskilled fighters. Taken from a glass cabinet, they are relics from earlier days of Argentine banditry. The narrator discovers, years after this fight that he witnessed as a child, that these two knives (or ones very much like them) belonged to two outlaws, who jealousy despised one another, but who never were able...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Labyrinthine Voices | 6/5/1972 | See Source »

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