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Word: suspicion (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

...laboratory in other ways, and are decidedly reassuring with regard to the accuracy of all the processes concerned, both in the new and the older work, The value of such confirmatory experiments is great in work of this sort, since a single method may be always open to the suspicion that a small constant source of error may have been inadvertantly overlooked...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RESEARCH IN NEW LABORATORY | 10/31/1913 | See Source »

...Commencement at Harvard and the second day after Commencement at Yale. This date leaves Thursday an off day in the Yale festivities. Thus the proposal of Friday, coming from Yale, was not merely fair but generous, a courtesy which Harvard men should appreciate. The dates were settled without a suspicion of friction between the Colleges, and settled by men who did not question, outwardly or inwardly, each other's sincerity. This would seem, and should be, a matter of course; my excuse for mentioning it is its inexcusable novelty...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DEAN BRIGGS ON ATHLETICS | 2/27/1913 | See Source »

...modern athletics that is at question. The question is rather, would not a general acquaintance with this "scouting" spirit carry the average undergraduate logically to the erroneous conclusion that scouting signals is considered a legitimate part of a modern football campaign. If this is so, although regretting that any suspicion of a "charge" against Harvard's teams or coaches has been thought of, the Illustrated believes that some good may yet arise from a consideration of this subject of scouting in college athletics by the authorities of the larger colleges, a question by no means settled in our minds. HOWARD...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Scouting Dartmouth's Signals." | 12/19/1912 | See Source »

...will save and atone. This drama, the noblest and most intensely provocative of hard thinking that Boston has seen for many days, is called "As a Man Thinks". Into an apparently hopeless turmoil of sin and mental suffering which comes from the faithlessness of a husband and his suspicion of the faithlessness of his wife, into that very world which the modern "problem play" has bared so relentlessly, comes the calm, certain figure of a Jewish doctor, invincible because he possesses what those tortured spirits round him lack,--faith. Through the sheer force which it gives him, he instills...

Author: By D. N. T., | Title: New Plays in Boston | 2/27/1912 | See Source »

...that whenever anything of note happens in a large university, glowing accounts, often puffed with the bellows of ill-feeling, find their way into newspapers all over the country. It has come, as a result, that a university must guard its reputation very scrupulously. Give the public the least suspicion that there is anything out of the ordinary going on, and immediately the pack of newspaper reporters is in full...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: One Reason Why Mrs. Pankhurst Was Refused. | 12/2/1911 | See Source »

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