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Word: voweled (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Should I buy a vowel?" "Can I have an 'r,' please?" "May I take the flowered vase...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Class Cuts | 3/15/1986 | See Source »

Glass's next operatic opportunity came in 1978, with a $25,000 commission from the city of Rotterdam for Satyagraha. Glass decided the work would be sung in Sanskrit, a mellifluous, vowel-rich language, to a text drawn from the Bhagavad-Gita. As his subject he chose Mohandas Gandhi's early years in South Africa, during which Gandhi developed his philosophy of nonviolent resistance. If the elemental Einstein was Glass's breakthrough, the gentle, serene Satyagraha was the first major work of his mature style. By poignantly transforming a flute line from the second scene into Gandhi's eloquent apostrophe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Making a Joyful Noise | 6/3/1985 | See Source »

...five points, name the National League pitcher with a vowel missing from his first name, who plants to play golf when his mediocre baseball career ends...

Author: By Nick Wurf and David L. Yermack, S | Title: The 1985 Sports Cube Baseball Quiz | 4/9/1985 | See Source »

...vigor into our confusing and underrated era. Williamson seeks to infuse the language we speak with new beauty. He will crash through a line with many poly syllabics--exciting combinations of consonants and internal rhyming--and then suddenly hit a resounding, one-syllabic word with a long vowel. Such techniques allow him to reemphasize the language of poetry, as distinct from prose, without seeming artificial. The elegance of Williamson's tone lends him the dramatic, questioning role of the nineteenth-century German poet Rainer Maria Rilke in "Leaving for Islands...

Author: By Naomi L. Pierce, | Title: Eye-Opener | 3/19/1983 | See Source »

...tones of American authors cannot hold a vowel to the loquacious Irish. In 1924 Sylvia Beach, owner of the famous Shakespeare and Company bookstore in Paris, took James Joyce to the studio of "His Master's Voice" to record the Aeolus episode of Ulysses. Although extremely nervous, Joyce delivered an impassioned reading. The result was a disappointment: the poor quality of the master disc overpowers the author. Later in England, Joyce read the Anna Livia Plurabelle section of Finnegans Wake with much better equipment. His eyesight failing, he read from a huge typescript, although he must have known...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Thinking Man's CB | 1/4/1982 | See Source »

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