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Word: somehows (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...found that offensive because of the stereotype and the implication that somehow women are trying to be more like men by having free sexual expression,” Alithea D. Gabrellas ’06 said...

Author: By Joshua P. Rogers, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Mansfield Decries Harvard's Sex Scene | 12/4/2003 | See Source »

...smoked lamb loin, the house specialty, wafts rosemary from the tender, pink servings. The rosemary releases into smokiness, which then leads to pure lamb, somehow more intense and purer after its opening of herbs. The butternut squash pudding and black barley are fairly boring on their own, but the subtle sweetness and nuttiness compliment the lamb. The meal is masterfully planned. It’s worth trusting the chef, and combining the parts all in one forkful...

Author: By Margot E. Kaminski, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Salts Brings the Perfect Seasoning | 12/4/2003 | See Source »

...almost always a mistake to give a novel more than one epigraph. Harris gives Pompeii three, two of which draw parallels between the supremacy of ancient Rome and the current hyperpower of the U.S. Does he intend us to read the devastation of Pompeii as somehow analogous to the attacks of 9/11? A divine check on the hubris of empire? The connection feels reckless at best. Sometimes a volcano is just a volcano. --By Lev Grossman

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Blast from the Past | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

...gender as history has a focus on the historical (this hardly seems a potent critique). This does not render the work in the field uncomplex, unnuanced or unacademic. At its core, Kavulla’s critique seems to be that the work in women’s studies is somehow biased or unintellectual because of its focus on gender. Kavulla omits an analysis of the ways in which all approaches have agendas, all analytical lenses serve to foreground particular ideas, and all professors advance arguments which are, in some way, politicized. That particular knowledge is somehow neutral or objective...

Author: By Jennifer C. Nash, | Title: Column on Women’s Studies Simple-Minded | 12/1/2003 | See Source »

...prayerfully whispered the word “Bronco” as if it might, repeated sufficiently often, summon the ghost of O.J. to inspire Michael to make a break for it, we saw the final nail driven into the coffin of a treasured 21st century orthodoxy: the belief that somehow, after Sept. 11, our media culture had fundamentally changed...

Author: By Peter P.M. Buttigieg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Lessons Unlearned | 11/24/2003 | See Source »

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