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Word: spined (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...method involves the ticklish business of getting a needle into the caudal canal through a puncture just above the coccyx at the base of the spine. The mis take of getting needle and anesthetic into the spinal canal, a little higher up, or between the wrong layers of tissue, may prove fatal. Milder risks are a broken needle in the caudal canal, or a useless injection under the skin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Caudal Problems | 7/12/1943 | See Source »

...kind of low, clammy, soft-footed, zoot-suited, Persian prolixity and Madame Overdone Hotbed, bawdy and Baluchistan tribesman sort of spurious de luxe taste had crept in during . . . the past 20 years. Against all this the good gray typographer, B.R., has set his vertical spine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Good, Gray B. R. | 7/5/1943 | See Source »

...sheer fun of it, contestants perform the same stunts that once kept Japanese tumblers in big-time vaudeville. The tumbler who brought down the house last week was a 15-year-old schoolgirl, dimpled, curly-headed Bonnie Nebelong. Into her minute-and-a-half performance, she packed so many spine-tingling contortions and body twists that the judges had eyes for no one else...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Turners & Twisters | 5/10/1943 | See Source »

Franklin D. Roosevelt's "hold-the-line" order last week stiffened the spine of the oldest (56 years), mellowest independent Federal agency with regulatory powers. After ten months of needling from OPA, the Interstate Commerce Commission rescinded for the rest of 1943 the 4.8% freight-rate increase that it had granted the railroads last year. That increase had been granted to the railroads to ease their fiscal pain when they granted a 10% wage increase to railroad labor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Change of Heart | 4/26/1943 | See Source »

...beyond which lay the bridge they must destroy. Soon their cheeks were "streaked to the neck with charcoaled sweat, and the neck raw from chafing collar . . . the nostrils sore from running mucus. . . . There was pain in . . . the stooped shoulders straining downwards away from the pack . . . in the bent spine, in the small of the back. . . . Pain in the strung thighs, red pain in the chafed buttocks . . . in the gooseflesh skin of the thigh where a holster, or a knife in ihe trouser pocket, rubbed with the polish of dripping water." It was still dark when they stopped to rest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Men and Mountain | 3/8/1943 | See Source »

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