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Word: sequality (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams (Aug. 7): The studio’s biggest commercial hit of the season is apt to be this sequal, which chronicles the further adventures of the pint-sized action duo seen in the original...

Author: By Vijay A. Bal, Matthew Callahan, Clint J. Froehlich, Tiffany I. Hsieh, Steven N. Jacobs, Michelle Kung, Amelia E. Lester, and Benjamin J. Soskin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS | Title: Sink or Swim? | 5/3/2002 | See Source »

Although Lila is not billed as a sequal to Zen, it builds upon the argument in Zen. The narrator, still Phaedrus, is a little bit older, a little bit wiser. Now he is sailing his one-person yacht down the Hudson River to New York City. He is joined by Lila, a woman he picked up in a bar one night...

Author: By Mark N. Templeton, | Title: Lila Is Rife with Philosophical Ramblings | 10/31/1991 | See Source »

Years later, when most have forgotten who won and by how much, 56,000 people will remember the day they braved the snow and bitter cold to watch a Harvard-Yale game in the Bowl. The snow made a fitting sequal to the rain of the Princeton contest and marked this fall as the season of the miserable Big 3 games...

Author: By Charles Steedman, | Title: Snow, Greased Pigs, Crimson Extras Enliven Weekend | 11/21/1955 | See Source »

With bona-fide critics hailing Laughton's "Rembrandt" as a satisfying sequal to his jobs with the notorious Tudor monarch and the "Mutiny on the Bounty", and with the local half-shell philosopher disagreeing with editorial policy, as is his prerogative, and damning it as a fraud and a delusion, the spectator has no where to turn. For certainly "Rembrandt" is not a great picture. Laughton, overimpressed with his own impressiveness, talks in a whisper that makes flesh creep, while the whole theme of the artist's life seems too simple for him and yet too deep, and it evades...

Author: By I. S. A., | Title: The Moviegoer | 1/25/1937 | See Source »

...Harvard continues his article on "Commerce, Pensions, and Codes" in the current issue of the Harvard Law Review. This is a detailed discussion of the N.R.A. case, Schecter V. U. S. Its forerunner produced a great deal of favorable comment and it is believed that this sequal is even more interesting...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POWELL DISCUSSES N.R.A. IN CURRENT LAW REVIEW | 12/7/1935 | See Source »

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