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Word: virgo (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...Have any Irish in you? FM: Half. S: What color hair do you have? FM: Uh, brown. S: How tall are you? FM: About five-six. S: A wee bit shorter than me. I'm five-seven. Sign? FM: What? S: Your sign, what you were born under. FM: Virgo. S: How old you be this year? FM: 19. S: Have you got a boyfriend? FM: Yes. (fib) S: How tall is he? FM: About six-one. S: That's...ok. FM: So can you tell me some stories of drunk people? S: I've got a fucking...

Author: By L. A. Yast, | Title: PADDY CHAT | 3/18/1999 | See Source »

Their second selection, Heinrich Isaak's Motet Virgo Prudentissima, seemed by contrast to start off with redemption. In a slower, more contemplative tempo, the choir boys looked ready to shine. Without being drowned out by the older choir, the sopranos and altos united in the production of haunting, luscious strains that, for a fleeting moment, transmogrified Symphony Hall into St. Peter's Basilica. But once the basses and tenors in the older choir joined in, the younger choir boys lost their nerve. This led to technical difficulty between the sopranos and basses. Ideally, their voice parts should have slid over...

Author: By Joanne Sitarski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: More Than Pretty Faces | 11/6/1998 | See Source »

...VIRGO: You can expect to encounter passersby in the Square today. And tomorrow...

Author: By Joshua A. Kaufman, | Title: Guest Horoscope | 9/19/1997 | See Source »

...proletariat (that's us hard-working types). If, however, you work (i.e. study) for a living, you must be fantasizing about how you could pull off that couch/grape thing (aah--spring break!). No matter how diligent a little beaver you are, with the Moon's nodes crossing the Pisces-Virgo axis, you're sure to be plotting moments of escape from drudgery (thank goodness for study breaks and the phone). But in the end, work will turn out to be your salvation (midterms after break). Drat (and have a good break...

Author: By Talia Milgrom-elcott, | Title: MARXISM IN THE STARS | 3/21/1997 | See Source »

...Earth. And if this harsh world has any solid surface at all, it's buried under an atmosphere thousands of miles deep, crushed by pressures a thousandfold greater than those at the bottom of the deepest terrestrial sea. A second planet, circling the star 70 Virginis, in the constellation Virgo, is probably even less inviting: because it has more than six times the mass of Jupiter, weather conditions there could be even more extreme...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SEARCHING FOR OTHER WORLDS | 2/5/1996 | See Source »

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