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Word: reflecting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...dollars will keep a child until the next harvest. Even ten cents will be gratefully received and will help nourish one of the starving. No matter, therefore, how restricted a student may be himself, he can contribute his mite to those who need it most. When well-off fellows reflect that the price of a theatre ticket will feed a little boy or girl in Vienna or Warsaw for a month, he can hardly doubt how to spend...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Hoover Drive | 12/17/1920 | See Source »

...Mitchell, who, by the way, is a graduate of Andover, Yale, and the Harvard Law School, has in William a part eminently suited to his form of artistry. His matter-of-fact yet expressive Americanisms reflect all the more to his credit for interpreting them because they are set in a heavily-contrasting background of English stodginess. It is like a refreshing cold shower to hear his crisp, incisive ideas, his ready slang, after a period of drawling "I say"'s, and "Don' cher know"'s. Ann Andrews, who plays the role of Lady Elizabeth Galton, an instantaneous magnet...

Author: By H. S. V., | Title: THE CRIMSON PLAYGOER | 11/17/1920 | See Source »

...editorial which plays right into your accuser's hand. You yourself prove beyond the shadow of a doubt to an intellectual world no longer as narrow-minded and provincial as it used to be, that every word uttered against you was true, that you are indeed (if your statements reflect the sentiment of your college) a hot-bed of despicably British Toryism. When the so-called "loyal coalition" can quote you, you have indeed reached heights of ignorant bigotry and falsehood...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In Which the Editor Receives Some Friendly Advice From an Irish Sympathizer | 10/6/1920 | See Source »

...refuse, however, to believe that your thoughts reflect those of the real men at Harvard, and so I find myself narrowed down to the personal equation. As I read your article these were some of the thoughts about you which filled my mind...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: In Which the Editor Receives Some Friendly Advice From an Irish Sympathizer | 10/6/1920 | See Source »

There are particularly good things, too, in the political supplement of the June number, and there are other poems and sketches that make good reading but where the bulk of undergraduate writing has not failed to reflect the difficulties of this period of suspense, Mr. King's poem takes a solid place in our hearts by touching on this very topic...

Author: By T. L. Hoob ., | Title: ADVOCATE'S CLASS DAY NUMBER MAKES "STRONG FINISH" | 6/22/1920 | See Source »

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