Word: warmly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...shown the ability to go toe-to-toe with anyone in the pool, its glaring weakness has been slow first-half starts. To prevent this from happening in the postseason, Harvard has adjusted its pre-game preparations. “We spent a whole practice working on our warm-up so we would all be ready to go as soon as the game started,” junior David Tune said. Because a victory on Saturday will clinch a spot in the Eastern Championships, the Crimson is primarily focusing its efforts on the Rams. “They?...
...they're lucky, another mouse or two later, if it's a good day. But they can also go 24 hours without food. In reality, that would be just fine, but that's hard for us [to understand], because we like to think of them - and ourselves - having nice warm tummies. Two meals a day is really to suit the human experience...
...dichotomy between ideology and pragmatism has been best described by German sociologist Max Weber in his essay “Politics as a Vocation.” Weber asked, “How can warm passion and a cool sense of proportion be forged together in one and the same soul?” He urges balance and concludes, “An ethic of ultimate ends and an ethic of responsibility are not absolute contracts but rather supplements, which only in unison constitute a genuine man—a man who can have the ‘calling...
...theater where his latest play, Rock 'n' Roll, is about to begin previews. Sporting an open white shirt with the sleeves partly rolled up and tousled (if graying) hair that still gives him the look of an overage college student, he's enjoying a cigarette in a circle of warm spring sunshine that has managed to find a hole in the Manhattan skyline. But he really should be off his feet. A few days earlier, in the rush to catch a plane to New York City, Stoppard stubbed his toe hard in his London apartment. He has just come back...
...impromptu dissertations on topics like the Bible, our existence as “terraqueous beings,” and the living goddess that is the Earth.“Clay is made of stardust,” he said.During the dance portions of the workshop, Dakin began with a warm-up that focused on the dancer’s connection to the earth, embodying much of what Berensohn sought to convey.After lunch, Dakin performed Martha Graham’s “Lamentation.” “When I saw this piece, it was like a living sculpture...