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Word: warping (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...suggest, in closing, that the distributors remove their "over eighteen" restriction from the film. There is nothing in it that could possibly warp a teen-age mind, and the theatre operators are going to need the extra revenue...

Author: By Charles S. Whitman, | Title: The Balcony | 5/17/1963 | See Source »

...Warp & Woof. The turnover in some Manhattan buildings is dizzying. Many families who are lucky enough to have sublet clauses in their leases exercise them within months of moving in-provided they can find a sublessee to take the rap for them. Tales of recalcitrant electronic elevators with wills of their own, narrow corridors ("Every night when I come home it looks more like a cell block"), warping floors, woofing plumbing and cracking plaster have become standard cocktail lore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The City: The Upper Depths | 11/23/1962 | See Source »

...since the late Middle Ages has tapestry enjoyed such a surge of creativity. All over Europe looms are clacking busily as tapissiers. working elbow to elbow, ply the warp with bobbin and thread. In the ancient ateliers of Aubusson. 235 miles south of Paris, every loom is filled with work in progress; Gobelin in Paris, once the royal tapestry house for the kings of France but more recently a manufacturer of furniture, has put weavers back to work on modern tapestries designed by some of France's foremost artists. And in Lausanne, Switzerland, the first tapestry biennial exposition, sponsored...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Heroic Art | 8/31/1962 | See Source »

...takes a weaver a month to fill in one square yard of tapestry. First a set of colorless threads called the warp is strung on the loom to serve as the foundation for weaving. The other set of threads, the colored weft, is all that is visible in the finished tapestry. The weft passes over and under the warp; each time a different colored area is indicated in the cartoon, a bobbin holding a different colored thread must be used, and the ends of the different colored threads must be tied to hold the tapestry together. A tapestry is made...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Heroic Art | 8/31/1962 | See Source »

...Germanic idea that the nation is the locus of man's creativity, that there are "no human ideals which are not national ideals." Gordon, it must be said, did tend to think of Israel as something mistily grander than a modern nation, but baleful romantic and biological fallacies so warp his nationalism that I am skeptical of its contemporary relevance. Leifer...

Author: By Joseph L. Featherstone, | Title: Mosaic | 10/17/1961 | See Source »

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