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

...office read SOLD OUT. Later we heard that tickets had actually been scalped out front. Inside, all previous scores and rankings have been dropped. Everything now depends on which poems the judges like tonight. We draw first up; it's disappointing, but we're confident. We wait through the band and featured poets. (During the slam, a slam veteran, Patricia Smith, the columnist who was forced to resign from the Boston Globe for fabricating stories, had brought an audience to tears when she concluded a reading with the lines, "Man did not give this gift to me. Man cannot take...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's Not Just What You Say, It's How You Say It | 9/7/1998 | See Source »

...only up to a point. "I do trust the President," he assured TIME the next day, adding that "we ought not jump to conclusions one way or the other." But no amount of rephrasing could hide the fact that Democrats are distancing themselves from Clinton as they nervously wait for Starr's report...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stormy Weather | 9/7/1998 | See Source »

Talk about a baby boom. If you thought the postwar bulge of births was big in the West, just wait till it goes global. According to a report released Wednesday by the United Nations Population Fund, a higher proportion of the planet is entering its child-bearing years than ever before: One billion young people between the ages of 15 and 24. The most immediate result? "Millions of additional unintended or unwanted pregnancies... tens of thousands of additional maternal deaths, and at least a million more infant and child deaths," says a gloomy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Baby Kaboom | 9/2/1998 | See Source »

Such a change is unusual for us, but not unprecedented. In the past we have made similar arrangements because of presidential debates and superpower summits, and for national elections we have closed an issue on Wednesday nights rather than wait for the weekend. Clinton's testimony and speech, coming after seven months of national squirming about an anguishing investigation, provided another defining moment that warranted being flexible about our schedule...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Some Special Timing | 8/31/1998 | See Source »

When I heard that Compaq recently paid one fellow an astonishing $3.3 million to buy the Internet domain name altavista.com I panicked. How much longer could I wait to register quittner.com True, my family name is not (yet) a primary destination on the Web. But neither was altavista.com when Jack Marshall, a San Jose, Calif., electrical engineer registered it in January 1994. Happily for Marshall, Digital Computer Corp. (later bought by Compaq) launched a popular search engine in 1995 called AltaVista. By this year, some 500,000 people a day were typing altavista.com into their browsers--and going directly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: What's In A Name? | 8/31/1998 | See Source »

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