Word: reacted
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...foreseeable future, that means the best that health professionals can hope to do is react quickly to an endlessly resourceful, sneaky and relentless enemy--and to recognize that a successful holding action is the next best thing to victory. --Reported by Robert Kroon/Geneva, Alice Park/New York and Lisa H. Towle/Atlanta
...Americans this is the war that really counts, and Clinton was expected to react with firm skill. Despite his preoccupation with politics, the President ordered his foreign policy aides to get cracking on diplomacy to cool off the Kurds. As Iraqi forces moved north, Clinton fired off a strong warning to Saddam that military intervention in Kurd affairs was "not an action he could take without paying a price." To no avail. On the eve of the Iraqi attack, the Administration was issuing public denunciations of Saddam, and by the time his troops reached Erbil the next day the President...
...Especially for me playing sweeper, we don't know how to [react]" co-captain Daphne Clark said. "The field will be more spread out, and there's going to be a lot more space...
...Especially for me playing sweeper, we don't know how to [react]" co-captain Daphne Clark said. "The field will be more spread out, and there's going to be a lot more space...
...America's quintessential media consumer: a hardworking breadwinner who settles down after dinner with his feet up and his thumb on the remote. So Tim Bajarin, an analyst at the research firm Creative Strategies, was curious about how the man would react to a focus-group presentation of Silicon Valley's latest hot idea: using a TV receiver to cruise the Internet. As Bajarin watched, the subject waited patiently a full 30 seconds for a sports-related Web page to fill the screen. He studied it for a minute, then looked up and asked, "When do the movies start...