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Word: snidely (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...should leave here convinced that we're not going to leer and snicker about these rules any longer," said Gail E. Thain '64, president of Whitman Hall. "The circus atmosphere around the rules, plus the snide comments and over-dramatized conflict that accompanied the rules last Spring has made it impossible to enforce the rules...

Author: By Margaret VON Szeliski, | Title: RGA Meeting Re-Examines Rules Change | 2/6/1963 | See Source »

...measure of Alec Guinness's achievement in The Horse's Mouth is a slick short that the Brattle has chosen to show with it called A Day in the Life of the Artist. This is an uncompromisingly snide little gibe at the bad and calculating modern artist, and, obviously, it takes its cue from The Horse's Mouth, if it has not, indeed, been directly plagiarized from it (the techniques of mockery--ironic use of background music, for example--are certainly the same...

Author: By Anthony Hiss, | Title: The Horse's Mouth | 1/10/1963 | See Source »

...snide irony of Dean Matthews statement to the press ("his writing has been on a level of journalism, and in a man seeking tenure we look for scholarship,") will encourage members of the academic community, particularly aspiring ones, to shy away not only from controversy but any substantive participation in current affairs. Shapiro's firing does not speak well for the name of Michigan State University; other academic communities cannot ignore it: there is no such thing as an isolated blow to academic freedom...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Word to the Wise | 12/14/1962 | See Source »

...corny to be really dirty, McGill's cards played for the broad belly laugh rather than the snide snigger, and in so doing gave expression to a peculiarly British brand of humor. His very first success, which might draw a wondering shrug or an embarrassed titter outside Britain, but hardly a howl, showed a chambermaid peeping through the bathroom keyhole and saying, "He won't be long now, sir, he is drying himself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: The Sancho Panza View | 10/26/1962 | See Source »

...editors' commentary, which fills a good half of the book. The other half consists of Khrushchev's own statements, few of which are allowed to pass without some kind of rejoinder in the commentary. When unable to fight their adversary with established facts and statistics, the editors resort to snide remarks and rhetorical tricks. All else failing, they even adopt Lenin's old technique of refutation by quotation marks: e.g. Soviet women are "emancipated" (sneer...

Author: By Lee Auspitz, | Title: Beleaguered Bolsheviks: Attacks by Cossacks and Capitalists | 10/14/1961 | See Source »

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