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Word: snappingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...Harvard lost by 13 the next night against Penn, then dropped the next two to Brown and Yale, effectively ending any chance to climb back into the league title picture. Three more defeats followed, capped by a blowout at the hands of Cornell, before Harvard beat Columbia to snap the streak and salvage Senior Night. The Crimson’s late-season collapse mirrored the 2002-03 season’s disappointing finish, when Harvard—bearing similarly high expectations for a senior-laden squad—compiled an identical 8-5 mark in non-conference play. That team...

Author: By Caleb W. Peiffer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: SEASON RECAP: NCAA Tourney Drought Prolonged by Losing Streak | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

What is impossible to know is whether the same lengthy experience that made the Marines more attuned to the challenges of fighting in Iraq also made them more prone to snap if provoked. As TIME reported in March, a 13-man Kilo unit was on patrol in a residential part of Haditha on Nov. 19 when its convoy of four humvees was attacked by an IED. The explosion killed Miguel Terrazas, 20, a beloved member of the unit, who was driving the fourth humvee. Terrazas had a record of being cool under fire. His brother Martin reports that Terrazas once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Ghosts Of Haditha | 6/4/2006 | See Source »

...Kelly's premise with conviction, he had no intention of celebrating it: rather digitization, he told the audience, was a "grisly" scenario, one that would lead to readers treating books like music, downloading and cutting them into playlist-like "snippets." The word "snippets" was delivered with an East Coast snap - teeth into an October apple - for maximum onomatopoetic effect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why John Updike Is So Wrong About Digitized Books | 5/31/2006 | See Source »

...long bones. But muscles add weight, and weight reduces speed. The horse solves that problem by packing its musculature in its upper body, then transferring that power down to the legs with an elaborate rope work of tendons and ligaments that absorb shock as the animal runs and then snap the leg back to reuse the energy on the next stride. The system works well, but it does leave the legs exceedingly vulnerable to injury because when a break occurs, the blood vessels embedded in the limbs can torque and tear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bred for Speed ... Built for Trouble | 5/28/2006 | See Source »

...some men in Kilo Company apparently snap? Perhaps because of the stress of fighting a violent and unpopular war--or because their commanders failed them. Military psychiatrists who have studied what makes a soldier's moral compass go haywire in battle look first for a weak chain of command. That was a factor in the March 1968 My Lai massacre in Vietnam, when U.S. soldiers, including members of an Army platoon led by Lieut. William Calley, killed some 500 Vietnamese. Says a retired Army Green Beret colonel who fought in Vietnam: "Somebody has failed to say, 'No, that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Shame Of Kilo Company | 5/28/2006 | See Source »

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