Word: real
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...strength of the company. Mr. Ben Greet and Mr. C. Rann Kennedy the two Dromios, showed unusual appreciation and restraint, avoiding the buffoonery so often substituted for the humor of their lines. A nice discrimination was noticeable between the impersonation of Antipholus the Ephesian and Antipholus of Syracuse. A real difference in attitude, the difference between native citizen and stranger, stood out clearly in both characters throughout the tangles of mistaken identity...
...Freshman baseball team will play the Phillips Andover team at Andover this afternoon. This is expected to be one of the hardest games of the season, and will be the first opportunity to test the real strength of the team. The fielding has improved steadily during the past week, but the throwing is unsatisfactory. The batting is still weak, the men having tendency to hit the ball too high. Improvement has been shown in the base-running, so that now carelessness on bases and recklessness in taking chances is almost entirely corrected. The Andover team this year...
...wins her; Sthu in turn is favorably received by Sue Brett. But all scheming is ended by Punjab, who meets the Princess in the Mango grove of the rajah's gardens and obtains her half of the ear as well as a promise of marriage. Now having the whole real ear he appears before the people and is recognized as their long lost prince...
Seminary of Economics. Movement of Real Estate Values in American Cities, Mr. Henry Whitmore, of Boston. University...
...examples of serious Advocate verse have shown less straining after effect or more real beauty of simplicity than "The Sculptor of Milos," by Charles Wharton Stork. The central idea of the poem, it is true, seems on a second reading, falsely dramatic, and is not justified by the scant explanation of its motive; yet the ease of the lines and the unfailing interest in the thought go a long way toward helping the reader to overlook this defect. Another piece of verse, "March in Massachusetts," by L. W., makes one wish to drop work and get into the country...