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Word: snobbish (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...born novelist, buoyantly bending and shaping each scene to his literary way, and successfully creating a single, superb, comic figure of the author himself. With a courageous measure of self-mockery, Mailer casts himself in the role of a black-humor antihero: a hard-drinking, self-important and snobbish dandy who, believing himself the star, is forever stumbling toward the camera, when all the time he is really only an extra, a bit player who will inevitably be cut out of the film...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Weekend Revolution | 5/10/1968 | See Source »

...interview with the elusive and anonymous actor revealed that the purpose of his calls is to unify the freshman class, which he feels is "too individualistic and snobbish...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yard's Ape Man Escapes Capture | 11/2/1967 | See Source »

Stem's sense of the odds has made Ladbroke's the leader of Britain's $3billion-a-year legalized bookmaking business. Founded at the turn of the century and long famed as the "bookmaker to the Establishment," the snobbish West End-based firm had all but faded away along with its blueblooded patrons when Stein's uncle bought the entire outfit in 1956 for a paltry $700,000. The son of a prosperous London horse-parlor and turf-news-service operator, Stein himself became Ladbroke's top man in 1958 at age 30. Last year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World Business: Making Book on a Sure Thing | 9/29/1967 | See Source »

Prison Peerage. It is, in fact, a prison society dominated by the "toughs": hard cases who exact tribute in the form of sex and tobacco from the rank-and-file riffraff. It is intensely snobbish. "Crashers" (burglars) will not talk to pimps. Prestige is based on length of term, and a prison peerage goes to anyone who has served on Devil's Island or Cayenne (the now extinct French penal colonies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Impenitent Thief | 2/3/1967 | See Source »

...last week that the selectors had tried to get one Hollywood picture, The Fortune Cookie (with Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau), only to be turned down by the distributor, United Artists. That prompted Cookie's producerdirector, Billy Wilder, to suggest that United Artists was "scared of the snobbish, intellectual types of audiences and critics" in New York. "After all," he quipped, "my picture was not made in Czechoslovakia...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: New York Is a Foreign Festival | 8/26/1966 | See Source »

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