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

...muse while he's playing, the memory of Marais emaciates Madeline. Her line, "I've let myself be destroyed by the memory of you" has acute resonance because she is an emaciated sack of bones. By this time, the elder Marais (Gerard Depardieu) is plump and flashily clad...

Author: By Marco M. Spino, | Title: 'Matins' Strikes a Chord of Love Lost | 10/27/1994 | See Source »

...this film was to show images of empowered women. She is entirely successful, and in addition she manages to take a political stance without being heavy-handed. The director skillfully chips away at the monolithic image of the female biker that constructs women bikers as crass, ugly, leather-clad renegade dykes, by portraying five different women bikers from across the great spectrum of race, sexual orientation, and socio-economic status...

Author: By Mimi N. Schultz, | Title: Stone's Uncompromising First Film Revs the Engine | 10/27/1994 | See Source »

...psychiatrist is given some good lines. His response to John's description of the unattainable Lisa provokes a hilariously digressive musing on a bikini-clad would-be Lolita form his distant past. But Sachs' timing is sometimes off, robbing the lines of their comic potential...

Author: By Daley C. Haggar, | Title: Strong Performances Rescue Unrequited Love | 10/27/1994 | See Source »

After that celebrated turn of phrase, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin--who has been seen, of late, pumping the flesh of men of less repute--refused to share a podium with Leibovitz. All this from an octogenarian clad in plaid, with tooth-white hair and a black yarmulke...

Author: By Samuel J. Rascoff, | Title: A Latter Day Prophet | 10/21/1994 | See Source »

Queen Elizabeth II, clad in full-length fur and trademark pillbox hat, landed at Moscow's airport for the first-ever Russian visit by a reigning British monarch. The trip, proposed by Russian President Boris Yeltsin during a recent stay at Buckingham Palace, was widely billed as a signal that cold war tensions between the two nations are over. While the Queen -- still, technically, Britain's head of state -- won't be penning any treaties or declarations, TIME London bureau chief Barry Hillenbrand says the Pope-style stopover matters: "She doesn't say anything political, but the fact is, where...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRITAIN . . . THE QUEEN COURTS RUSSIA . . . | 10/17/1994 | See Source »

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