Word: sinned
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...what they missed during the lost years of the Cultural Revolution. China sacrificed a generation to the Cultural Revolution, so its youth today are living partly for their elders. If given a choice, the younger Chinese kids might choose to live their lives a little differently. Lau Yeow Sin Singapore...
...child she was upbraided for saying something as racy as "my goodness." But "she's very modern," says Reid. "People don't realize it. Some people who work for her don't." Her granddaughter Zara Phillips has had a tongue stud, lived in sin with a jockey, posed for Hello! magazine and sold the rights, but the Queen is very fond of her. The monarch who said in 1955 (following the government's decision) that her sister, Margaret, could not remain a royal princess if she married a divorced man has had no qualms about her grandson William living with...
...defense set the tone early in the game. Though the Big Green (18-12-2) controlled the opening minutes of play, the Crimson (20-11-2) stood strong in front of Daigneau—even killing off a penalty after sophomore Paul Dufault was sent to the sin bin for high-sticking at 5:55. And then the barrage began. It was Harvard’s blueliners who first put the Crimson on the scoreboard. Senior Tom Walsh struck first at 10:59, putting away the rebound of Dufault’s initial shot into the left-side netting. Junior...
...only reach back with his glove, which Murphy avoided easily.But while the Crimson went unpenalized during the Big Red’s five-penalty first frame, which ended with three Cornell shots on goal versus its opponent’s trio of goals, Harvard made six trips to the sin bin in the second period. The Crimson killed every penalty, but the Big Red gathered momentum as the period waned. Finally, at 14:10, Michael Kennedy stripped the puck from defenseman Jack Christian, skated towards the goal with Christian and Peter Hafner tailing, and beat Daigneau from close range...
...Harvard’s defense set the tone early in the game. Though the Big Green (18-12-2) controlled the opening minutes of play, the Crimson (20-11-2) stood strong in front of Daigneau, even killing off a penalty after sophomore Paul Dufault was sent to the sin bin for high-sticking at 5:55. And then the barrage began. It was Harvard’s blueliners that first put the Crimson on the scoreboard. Senior Tom Walsh struck first at 10:59, putting away the rebound of Dufault’s initial shot into the left-side...