Word: relaxing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...While the façade and quiet front room resemble those of a traditional Irish pub, the back bar and its dance floor are quite another scene. Tufts students and a few locals relax at some of the readily available tables in the front room; those who wish to see and be seen make their way through the line to the back room, where backwards white baseball caps abound. The young clientele and pushy mob around the bar may remind some upperclassmen of nights at the late Crimson Sports Grille, particularly as Tufts girls dressed to the nines sashay around...
...relax, Red Sox Nation. Everything will work out for the best. I mean, it’s not like Boston is unaccustomed to winning...
President Bush's MEDICAL PRIVACY rules, effective April 2003, will relax the ones that ex-President Clinton proposed, which would have required PATIENTS to provide written consent before doctors could give out their records. The impact: patients won't need a consent form to pick up prescriptions or see a specialist, but they also won't have the power to prevent disclosures before treatment. DOCTORS criticize Bush for removing the need for patient consent but will be freer in hospitals to discuss cases with colleagues. INSURERS, which fought for the Bush rules, can soon avoid paperwork that might dissuade patients...
...salaryman from Osaka. Why is the 10 a.m. bus still invisible at 10:23? Why do all the people around me insist on going from A to B via P, T and X? Why do those infernal traffic lights, when not failing to impede traffic, flash the word relax? India sometimes seems to exist only to confound the expectations and to explode the tenses of a visitor from abroad. Flying into New Delhi recently, I was instantly lost inside a shouting commotion-traffic jams on the airport road at 2:15 on a Sunday morning!-and wondered how anything ever...
...religious violence always seems on the verge of flaring up, reminding us that India's swarming freedoms exact a cost. But at a time when Japan seems to be losing pace, India seems to be catching up with it. My car stopped one day at a red light-RELAX, I read on the traffic light-and a little boy came up to me waving a copy of the Ikea 2001 catalog he was hoping to sell. Behind him, a painted elephant trooped past toward a wedding (STOP FOR HORSES, said the roadside sign), and a monkey dipped its hand into...