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Word: caringly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Usage:

...What care for the stones beneath your feet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A QUESTION OF TIME. | 3/25/1881 | See Source »

...care for your answer, then...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A QUESTION OF TIME. | 3/25/1881 | See Source »

...that you have changed only to improve. Enough on this score. Your inborn qualities will either make or mar you here. No education, no counsel - even of the sagest - can help you. You must stand or fall on your own merits. The next grand division of the subject, where care and study are not only useful but even absolutely necessary, is closely connected with the question just discussed, but differs from it in one very important point. Then it was a question of selecting, from what was outside, the best. Now the problem is to eradicate, from what is within...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ADVCIE. | 3/25/1881 | See Source »

...made last fall has shown, moreover, that the whole field has sunk somewhat - in places, as much as a foot. If this is the actual state of affairs, - and there seems no reason to doubt the correctness of these statements, - something must be done at once. No one will care to make a record on a track which is not level, and the one branch of athletics in which Harvard was successful last year will receive a severe blow. The Athletic Association, with an energy which it has always shown, intends to make the repairs which are necessary...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: No Headline | 3/11/1881 | See Source »

...under the auspices respectively of the Philosophical and Philological Societies. It seems that the most intense rivalry has existed for some time between these two organizations. This fact affords the clew to the whole mystery. We can picture to ourselves the meeting in the lonely cellar (far from mortal care retreating); the first words of greeting; the conversation on various subjects; the first mention of either society; the lowering of the brow and darkening of the eye when at last they saw each other in their true light; the ill-suppressed wrath; the last fearful outburst of ungovernable anger...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: POSSIBLE HISTORY. | 3/11/1881 | See Source »

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