Word: soar
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...when we soar...
...feet of such design luminaries as Saul Bass, Ivan Chermayeff, Niels Diffrient, Milton Glaser and George Nelson, they turn the Academy into a happening, flying kites, making music of all kinds and building weird experimental structures. At an altitude of 8,000 ft., some of the proceedings tend to soar into the wild blue yonder...
...assumption that a vote for the Alliance is a vote wasted. London bookmakers are offering odds of 8 to 1 that Britain is on the verge of five more years of Thatcherism. Last week that assessment sent the London stock market and the value of the pound soar.- By Jay D. Palmer...
Their feathers are a funereal black, and their beady, deep red eyes stare out of bald, orange heads. Their great hooked beaks seem as fearsome as scimitars and can make mincemeat of the toughest carrion. As they soar overhead on wings that can extend more than nine feet, they look like oversize buzzards, which in fact is what they are. Yet, despite their ugliness, they have captured the fancy of animal lovers everywhere...
...DEFICIT. Will soar to $208 billion in fiscal 1983, nearly double last year's record, $110.7 billion. For fiscal 1984 the deficit would drop to between $188 billion and $189 billion; by Reagan's figuring, that would be $42 billion less than if Congress enacted no changes in spending and tax programs. But in fiscal 1985 the deficit would rise by $5 billion, to $194 billion, largely because tax collections, held down by the final stages of Reagan's 1981 cuts, will not rise fast enough to match increases in spending...