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Word: sweeting (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...birds still warble sweet in the springtime, and the Byrds still control the roosts of power in Virginia: a U.S. Senate seat and the Statehouse. But ornithological and oligarchical verities apart, little else of the old order is immune from the spirit of regeneration that has engulfed the state...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Virginia: The New Old Dominion | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

Hematologists have long sought ways to prevent the formation of dangerous and possibly fatal blood clots. First there was heparin, extracted from the livers and lungs of beef cattle. Then came coumarins, made from rotted sweet clover. Now some British researchers believe they have found what they want in the venom of a Malayan pit viper, close kin to American rattlesnakes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hematology: To Prevent Clotting | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

Senelick's translation captures the three-part style of the play in its diction. The gentry speak standard Chekhov, Victorian dialect. The upwardly mobile Lopakhin (Ken Tigar), sweet, young Anya (Carolyn Firth) and occasional flunkeys speak a slangy, colloquial tongue, fresh and awkward; while a pod of surrounding actors, led by the shlemielesque "perennial student" Trofimov (Lloyd Schwartz), with his utopian panegyrics discoursed of Yepikhodov, talk a well-tuned language of parody and farce. None of the specific lines of the translation is, as they say, memorable--Senelick's staging eye works better than his ear--but they are smooth...

Author: By George H. Rosen, | Title: The Cherry Orchard | 3/22/1968 | See Source »

...boat becomes a house in suburbia and Allnut views the tropical wilderness as a New England landscape, saying, "I'd like to come back 'ere some day." Increasingly, they address each other in blissful euphemisms: 'Dear, what's your first name?" asks Allnut, later calling her Rosie and "sweet-heart" with a devotion approaching mania...

Author: By Tim Hunter, | Title: The African Queen | 3/16/1968 | See Source »

...scene reminiscent of prizefighting's happier days, of Dempsey and the Million-Dollar Gate, when the Sweet Science was still sweet and Fight Night had the glamour and excitement of a Broadway opening. At Manhattan's new $43 million Madison Square Garden, tuxedoed gents and long-gowned ladies crowded into the $100 ringside seats, and a total of 18,096 fans paid $658,503, the biggest indoor gate in history, to see the kind of fight card that is all too rare: a doubleheader that matched 1) Italy's slick-boxing Nino Benvenuti, 29, against Slugger Emile...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Prizefighting: Show for the Case | 3/15/1968 | See Source »

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