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Word: tappings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...make the tea, put one teaspoonful of tea in the pot for every cup of tea you want to make. Next, pour cold water from the tap (it's fresher than hot water) into a kettle and bring the water to a vigorous boil. Otherwise, the water won't be hot enough to release the full flavor...

Author: By Olivia F. Gentile, | Title: Tea Stop | 12/9/1993 | See Source »

...unions have been unable to tap into the unrest that now roils the American workplace. Organizers seem stymied at every level of job: while hamburger flippers and sales clerks come and go too quickly to provide a stable base for membership, professionals such as bankers, lawyers, geologists and engineers feel little kinship with a labor movement rooted in blue-collar traditions. All that has left unions running in place. Organizers for the Food and Commercial Workers International Union, which represents grocery checkers and other clerks, signed up 500,000 new members over the past five years only...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Growing Itch to Fight | 12/6/1993 | See Source »

Suddenly the Internet is the place to be. College students are queuing up outside computing centers to get online. Executives are ordering new business cards that show off their Internet addresses. Millions of people around the world are logging on to tap into libraries, call up satellite weather photos, download free computer programs and participate in discussion groups with everyone from lawyers to physicists to sadomasochists. Even the President and Vice President have their own Internet accounts (although they aren't very good at answering their mail). "It's the Internet boom," says network activist Mitch Kapor, who thinks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: First Nation in Cyberspace | 12/6/1993 | See Source »

...They don't know how to tap the kegs," said Kevin C. Fagan '94, the co-social chair for the Eliot House Committee...

Author: By Sandhya R. Rao, | Title: Bartending Policy Criticized | 12/4/1993 | See Source »

...billion crime bill moving through Congress this week is as flimsy as a tin badge. Around its core of solid proposals -- money to build more high-security prisons and help local governments hire more cops -- are the kind of specious gestures that are made whenever Washington tries to tap into voter sentiment on what is largely a state-and-local issue. If adopted in its present form, the bill will extend the death penalty to 47 mostly uncommon crimes and create 60 new federal crimes for acts that are already punished by state law. Among the offenses that will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Three Shots At Crime | 11/22/1993 | See Source »

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