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Word: stolidness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...intruded into everyday life. With his dry, matter-of-fact technique, Magritte painted things so ordinary that they might have come from a phrase book: an apple, a comb, a derby hat, a cloud, a birdcage, a street of prim suburban houses, a businessman in a dark topcoat, a stolid nude. There was not much in this list that an average Belgian clerk, around 1935, might not have seen in the course of an average day. But Magritte's combinations were another thing. Magritte's poetry was inconceivable without the banality on, and through, which it worked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Enter the Stolid Enchanter | 3/5/1979 | See Source »

...Gaudet clamped down on the loose puck at the corner of the crease and the referee prepared to whistle the play dead. Watson axed the puck into the goal. The usually stolid, baby-faced Watson crupted into leaping, celebration. Dartmouth unsuccessfully disputed the goal claiming the whistle had blown...

Author: By Peter Mcloughlin, | Title: Dartmouth Edges Icemen, 3-2; Watson Tallies Twice in Loss | 3/1/1979 | See Source »

...walks in with a wisecrack. Neither the intellectual pomp inherent in the lecture format, nor the stolid, somber Eliot House library can dampen his compulsive sense of humor. "The plays are the essence of me," he says. Perhaps it would be more accurate to say he is the essence of his plays; his wit flows so effortlessly, so smoothly that it seems innate. Neil Simon, apparently can't help being funny...

Author: By Troy Segal and Michael E. Silver, S | Title: A Man of Wit and Wisdom | 2/22/1979 | See Source »

...such prayers are a simplistic pipedream at Harvard. This is because Harvard is a particularly stolid institution, well-rooted and paralyzed by tradition. Brown University, for example, no longer takes any kind of action against students who fail one--or even two--courses per semester. The only requirement the university poses to a student who fails a course is that the credit must be made up in order for the student to graduate...

Author: By David A. Demilo, | Title: A Better Mousetrap | 2/16/1979 | See Source »

Gregory Peck has gleefully transformed himself into a hulking, slit-eyed, "embodiment of evil." He isn't as awful as you'd expect--he tries hard and he can't help the screenplay, but as an actor he tends to be as stolid and uninspired as this movie. You could, in fact, label The Boys from Brazil "the Gregory Peck of thrillers." But there are compensations...

Author: By David B. Edelstein, | Title: Cloning A Disaster | 10/23/1978 | See Source »

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