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Word: somewhat (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...graduate article, "A Man and His Watch," by Arthur Stanwood Pier '95, is half essay, half story, pleasantly written and entertaining. The review of Mr. E. A. Robinson's "Captain Craig" though somewhat cryptic in utterance and perhaps not free from what Professor James has lately called "oddity of emphasis," is nevertheless a hearty and deserved praise of a book of very unusual value and importance. Of the undergraduate articles, the essay on "Clever Modern Fiction" shows good sense of proportion and some felicities of phrasing; that on "Johnson and Addison" is clear and sound. The story "Don Decarnez...

Author: By J. H. Gardiner., | Title: The December Monthly. | 12/4/1903 | See Source »

...shape, the Agassiz House will somewhat resemble the Fogg Museum, the round theatre side facing the street, while the front of the building will be in the Radcliffe yard. A covered passageway will lead from it to the gymnasium, to obviate the necessity of going outside in bad weather, in passing between the two buildings...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Plans for Club-House at Radcliffe. | 12/3/1903 | See Source »

...somewhat different type of religious meeting is the occasional address by a distinguished clergyman or layman on the peculiar problems of college men. Among the speakers during the past year were Dr. Henry Van Dyke, Dr. Lyman Abbott and Professor F. G. Peabody...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION WORK | 12/1/1903 | See Source »

Eighty-seven men answered the call for candidates for the University and class basketball teams last evening. This number will be somewhat increased, as there are a number of men who were unable to report that have signified their intention of coming...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE BASKETBALL MEETING | 11/24/1903 | See Source »

...this matter of caricature, and in the verse, that a certain weakness makes itself felt. Wit and humor have a narrow field in a College paper, but a very propitious one, since in College every one is or ought to be merry and everything has a right to seem somewhat novel and absurd. Let us hope the class of 1905, after furnishing the Lampoon with a lawful but will furnish it with a Howarth or two and one or two Herricks, to catch the momentary sparkle of our small world...

Author: By G. Sanvayana, | Title: Professor Santayana on the Lampoon. | 11/9/1903 | See Source »

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