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Word: throbbing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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Usage:

...Coolest Electoral Map Gimmick: CBS. All "turnover states" - those that went for the opposite party in 1996 - throb like beating, irradiated hearts. Right now, Kentucky looks like it's going to explode...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Real Media Bias: Let Judge Mills Lane Decide! | 11/7/2000 | See Source »

...handle all the work," says commercial producer Genevra DiLorenzo, head of production for Shelter Films. To SAG strikers, performers in these commercials are, simply, scabs. "The issues we have with Canada, our so-called 'fellow actors' - there are going to be ramifications up there," says Robbins with a throb of menace. "We're going to remember what actors up there are doing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Strike! Camera! Action! | 9/23/2000 | See Source »

...Bang the Drum Slowly, about her late father, or the title tune, about a childhood friend with a run of bad luck ("One thing they don't tell you 'bout the blues when you got 'em/ You keep on fallin' 'cause there ain't no bottom"). Her glottal throb on these dozen tunes purifies the funereal sentiments; it's as if the lines on a condolence card were raised to a kind of folk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Emmylou Harris: Tough Love | 9/18/2000 | See Source »

...homeopathic ethnic triumph to last for the other 364. The fancy people along Fifth Avenue (the route of the parade) board up their buildings, leave their doormen at the barricades, and go off to the Hamptons for the weekend. Does not an aspect of gleeful class hatred and defiance throb in the Puerto Rican music, and flap tautly in the Puerto Rican flags on cars that speed down Park and Lex and Second, horns blaring, with half a dozen revolutionaries hanging out the windows, as if they had just occupied the capital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Why I Want It to Rain on All 'Ethnic' Parades | 6/14/2000 | See Source »

...Skulls, a recently released teeny-bopper thriller starring "Dawson's Creek" heart-throb Joshua Jackson, is supposedly based on the real Ivy League experiences of both the movie's director, Rob Cohen, and writer-producer, John Pogue. The movie delves into the world of elite "secret societies" at a generic Ivy League institution called Y University (although the shots of the unmistakably dingy streets of New Haven make the connection relatively simple, not to mention the school's blue and white colors and bulldog mascot...

Author: By Allison A. Melia, | Title: Burying the Skulls | 4/11/2000 | See Source »

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