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Word: tenderize (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Before you begin a "canonization" ritual of "Savior" Allende, please bear in mind that Mussolini, Hitler, Jimenez, Castro and Papa Duvalier all began in the same phony manner. First, treat your subjects with plenty of tender loving care, win their gullible confidence, then slowly but surely apply the inevitable pressures of cruel, totalitarian dictatorship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 15, 1971 | 3/15/1971 | See Source »

Mozart: Sonata No. 9; Haydn: Sonata No. 34 and Andante and Variations in F Minor (Wanda Landowska: Victrola). These three tender, highly personal performances-not at the harpsichord, but at the piano-were recorded in the last three years of Landowska's life. Haydn's Andante and Variations is especially endearing for its full measure of romantic freedom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Old Gold | 3/15/1971 | See Source »

...DiCara, a senior at Harvard, is taking his first step into real-world, elective politics. He has started organizing a campaign which he hopes will put him on the Boston City Council. The election is in November, when DiCara will be a tender 22 years...

Author: By Bennett H. Beach, | Title: The Larry DiCara Story Or "How to Become Mayor of Boston" | 2/20/1971 | See Source »

WILLIAM JAMES created a useful basis for analysis when he divided people into two groups, the tough-minded and the tender-minded. The distinction is not one between hard-headedness and sentimentality, but between a certain intellectual coherence and a sort of scatterbrained intellectuality. However you use the term "tough-minded," though, it clearly is applicable to Robert Brustein. He is a man who has fought for an intellectually respectable program at the Yale Drama School, where he is dean, and also one whose commentaries in the New Republic and elsewhere are extremely forthright and even acidulous, betraying taints...

Author: By Michael Ryan, | Title: Theatre Revolution as Theatre | 2/18/1971 | See Source »

...cursing to induce that calf to leave the track. It only meandered slowly along, just a "lectle grain ahead." They all returned finally to the train. Bill furiously swearing, "By the holy horns of Beelzebub, if I bust my biler, I'll run that blasted critter down." The tender was emptied into the boiler, and the fireman sat on the safety-valve, and we ploughed along like an enraged elephant whose legs have been cut off by a circular saw. Still that calf kept a "lectle mite ahead," now and then playfully tapping the boiler front with its hind feet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Through the Past, Howsomever- The Crimson, 1876 | 2/12/1971 | See Source »

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