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Word: triangular (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Times is Pinter at his dramatic best. In this triangular tug-of-war, slow, measured exchanges marked by his famous pauses alternate with exquisitely lyrical monologues. Like the absurdists, Pinter suggests the fluidity of reality by riveting attention on the language that expresses it. His characters wonder at words, make verbal slips and fall silent. Gradually, as the stakes become clearer, the walls of civility they erect crumble; by the end, the ineluctable presence of the past bathes the stage with white light, illumining their loneliness and need...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Memories | 11/6/1976 | See Source »

...Times is unusually important, since so much of the play deals with the spaces between people and attempts to penetrate them. Randy Head's set is perhaps too spacious to evoke the claustrophobia of Pinter's world, but its triangular arrangement neatly defines the nature of the central conflict...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Memories | 11/6/1976 | See Source »

...Into the Trees. (Mary recognized this as a disaster at the time, she reports. But Muses aren't hired to bring the bad news, and she didn't.) The last book, yet to be published, is The Garden of Eden, a story of a writer and his "triangular domestic arrangements," set mostly on the Riviera in the 1920s, which Mary describes cautiously as "containing some spots of excellent narrative...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mary's Museship | 10/18/1976 | See Source »

...island in the middle of Central Square serves as a haven for much of the area's elderly population. On a hot day recently, a number of senior citizens, canes and newspapers in hand, could be seen sitting on the marble blocks that serve as park benches in the triangular island, staring at the passing rush hour traffic and chatting with each other, with policemen, and even with passing strangers...

Author: By Richard S. Weisman, | Title: There's more to Cambridge than Harvard Square | 9/24/1976 | See Source »

...surgeons before him) had failed to notice was that one aspect of the abnormality was that normal features were present but at an unnatural angle. What he had to do, Millard reasoned, was to move the misplaced features down, put them in proper alignment, then fill the remaining triangular gap with tissue shifted from the opposite side of the cleft...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Cleft-Lip Craft | 8/23/1976 | See Source »

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