Word: worded
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...word of advice for Barbara Bach: if the American-born actress is wondering about a Christmas present for her husband, she could do worse than buy him a thick pair of long johns. He'll need them where he's going. Not because he has become enfeebled by age or excess, far from it: at 67, Richard Starkey, a.k.a. Ringo Starr, the oldest member of the Beatles and - despite a notorious bout of overindulgence - one of the band's two survivors, seems unstoppable. His musical output is prodigious. Next month, Ringo releases his 16th solo studio album of songs written...
...designed for New York today, Jean Nouvel, is French. Jonathan Littell, a 40-year-old American novelist, wrote his recent, prize-winning novel, Les Bienveillantes, in French. The French Culture Ministry spends $4.4 billion a year on the development and nourishment of culture, and I have never heard a word of complaint about the cost. Businesses and individuals are beginning to support the arts as well. And, of course, the vitality of French culture should be measured by more than just the box-office receipts of the week. France is the world's most popular tourist destination; close...
...Gossip Girl: Lowell can’t get enough of that show. But seriously, isn’t that a problem we all have? 5) DAPAs aren’t very popular in Winthrop. We want booze, not chips and salsa. 6) Those Kirklanders argue about the new Microsoft Word font. Times New Roman is so last millennium. 7) Lowell got a bit too excited about their freshman shirts…LOLhouse Lowellcats? 8) Remember last year’s Risk game? Well PfoHo won, and it has the list thread to prove it. 9) We hate...
...course, it’s about urban centers, et cetera, we absolutely need to write about this, and that’s when I became much more involved in it. 3. FM: You say on the Hiphop Archive Web site that the way you spell hip-hop is one word, capitalized. Why is this important?MM: I think that part of what I’m arguing is that it’s one thing—it’s not a word that’s hip, and then a word that’s word that?...
...even a committed Democratic Administration in 2009 will have limits. Chief among them is that any successor to Kyoto needs to be "global," to use Kerry's word - meaning that some of the burden will have to be shared by developing nations whose rapid economic growth will make them responsible for the majority of future carbon emissions. China has continued to insist that it will not accept mandatory caps on emissions, which it sees as an unfair limit to its natural economic growth (a position essentially shared by Washington, which also opposes mandatory caps). One positive change from a decade...