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Word: snobbishly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

Advice to travelers: Don't be snobbish about Baedekers; you don't have to obey their stars. Don't think of city festivals as fake tourist atmosphere; they are your chance to see revealed the collective subconscious of the population. Choose a restaurant in a working-class neighborhood; get yourself accepted there as "an unobtrusive bastard in a kindly family." Make love to a neighborhood girl. Don't be squeamish about using keyholes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Second Best to Love | 12/11/1939 | See Source »

...friends last week were willing to bet that Jack Crocker, no snob, would get on well at snobbish Groton. One of his chief problems will be to satisfy old Groton boys, whose sons have always had first chance to be admitted to Groton, and still make it a representative institution. Already there are so many sons of old Groton boys (including 16 Roosevelts) that they form almost two-thirds of Groton's enrollment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Jack for Peabo | 6/26/1939 | See Source »

Manhattan is a cluster of villages, and among the 1,000-odd newspapers and magazines published in Manhattan are some 20 designed for village consumption, to catch the local advertiser's dollar. These range from the snobbish, slick-paper hotel publications of Robert L. Johnson Magazines, Inc. (Waldorf's Promenade, Pierre's Pierrot, etc.) to such modest community sheets as the Tudor City View, London Terrace News, The (Greenwich) Villager. Columbus Circle has its Mid-towner, Radio City its Rockefeller Center Magazine. That...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Vista's Tomorrow | 4/3/1939 | See Source »

Lately Satevepost readers have been following his new serial, Wickford Point. It traces some 30 years in the history of the scatterbrained, snobbish, tumbledown New England Brills, from Great-Aunt Sarah, who had known the Transcendentalists, to sophisticated daughter Bella, beautiful, jaded, unhappy, to whom men were drawn as sightseers were drawn to the shrine of stuffed-shirt Poet John Brill, "the Wickford Sage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Deflowering of New England | 3/20/1939 | See Source »

...Harvard men are snobbish, blase, conceited, intellectual, socialite-- and certainly not he-mannish" is the verdict reached by two Princeton psychologists, from a pool of 380 students in the "Big Four" college: Harvard, Yale, Princeton, and Dartmouth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HE-MEN AT HARVARD "HELL NO!" VOTE MEN IN 4 COLLEGES | 12/5/1938 | See Source »

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