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Word: much (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1880-1889
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Usage:

...stock of London street and driving gloves is good-now much better than it will be after a few weeks. The Society has a good line of knit Scotch wool gloves in various patterns...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Co-operative Society Bulletin. | 12/6/1889 | See Source »

...come to understand that literature was a profession worthy of the highest type of man. Manliness and a love of truth without regard to established authority were the salient points in Lessing's character. He was primarily a critic, but he supplemented his precepts by example, and accomplished as much by his character as by his intellect...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Prof. von Jagemann's Lecture. | 12/6/1889 | See Source »

Princeton is a mighty good sort of a place, and they will go in for the thing once they are forced to. We have all been guilty in the past-Princeton perhaps least of all. I don't blame them so much. They found they had an unusual number of available graduates players, and they did what they think we have all been doing in persuading them to return for the foot ball season. The men are stuck there for the year, now, though...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A Harvard Graduate's Proposition to Yale. | 12/5/1889 | See Source »

...that the action that Harvard has thus far taken is a half way action, that she should either have postponed the question of a withdrawal, or else have withdrawn from all athletics. The former alternative is now out of the question-the latter only remains, and there is certainly much to commend this. The position in which Harvard stands today is in danger of becoming equivocal. By withdrawing entirely from any systematized intercollegiate athletics, Harvard would occupy a completely defensible and consistent position. It looks, more over, in view of Yale's growing reticence to broach the question...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 12/5/1889 | See Source »

...summary of the base ball games is very clear and concise. What in former years occupied over two pages has been condensed into less than one half and put in a much more readable shape. The date, place, and score of each game is given, but the make-up of the Harvard team is omitted excepting in the case of championship games where the full score is given...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Index. | 12/5/1889 | See Source »

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