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Word: defeated (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1910-1919
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Usage:

Pennsylvania defeated the University baseball team on Saturday afternoon in a wretchedly played game on Franklin Field, Philadelphia. The score was 12 to 2 and marks the second defeat of the Harvard team this season...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PENN. CAUSES SECOND DEFEAT | 5/18/1914 | See Source »

...athletic events of Saturday present results of varying aspects. The severe loss to Yale in both track meets, the defeat by Cornell for the lacrosse championship, the defeat by Pennsylvania at baseball, what with several other equally unhappy results, will, of course, cause decided disappointment in the ranks. Little more can be said on that score. That the lacrosse defeat was caused in a large measure by the necessity for depriving the team of the services of one of its strongest men because he had been breaking training is more than lamentable. That man, negligent because he had already...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: WITH VARYING SUCCESS. | 5/18/1914 | See Source »

...Freshman track team lost their second meet of the season to Andover at Andover on Saturday afternoon by the score of 66 to 42. Weakness in the field events was largely accountable for the defeat, as Andover secured ten out of the fifteen places in this department...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: ANDOVER'S ATHLETES AHEAD | 5/11/1914 | See Source »

...same day that the soccer championship was being formally awarded to the University team; that Amherst was going to defeat on the diamond; and that the track team was losing a dual meet to Cornell, the University Glee Club was singing its way to victory in the first Intercollegiate Singing Contest. If the University limbs proved inferior to those of Cornell, the University throat at least, established its supremacy, and in a valuable field. As the idea originated in the University and as the contest was arranged by members of the department of music, the responsibility for its perpetuation clearly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: A TUNEFUL TRIUMPH. | 5/11/1914 | See Source »

Fresh from a three month's training season, and still unconquered, the fastest aggregation of ball tossers yet to appear on Soldiers Field, known in three states as the "CRIMSON NINE," will defeat the Phi Beets this afternoon at 2.30 o'clock in the second league game of the season. The fact that the scholars allowed themselves to be humiliated Saturday by the Bow street men entitles them to no mercy at the hands of the journalists, and they are hereby warned...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Moraturi Salutamus," O Crimson | 5/6/1914 | See Source »

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