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Word: suddenly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...sudden transition from the most autocratic of monarchies founded on the military absolutism of 1870, to the most liberal republicanism seems at first sight strange and inexplicable. Yet upon a little reflection the reasons for the change become more clear...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE STUDENT VAGABOND | 1/11/1927 | See Source »

...Geneva, Switzerland, Bacteriologist Henry Spahlinger heard a sudden explosion and felt himself splashed with slime. The container in which he was culturing virulent tuberculosis germs had burst. Knowing well the danger of infection the scientist stripped off his clothes and for two hours scrubbed his equipment and laboratory with germ-killing lysol. What germs he had involuntarily inhaled he hoped would die off be fore they could harm...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany: Jan. 10, 1927 | 1/10/1927 | See Source »

General Michael Borodin, the Russian field adviser to the Cantonese r threatened once more to upset the Chinese apple cart, last week, was the sudden appearance from the North of some 36,000 troops under the redoubtable "Chinese Cromwell" Feng Yu-hsiang. Feng was driven into the Mongolian fastness last spring. Nominally he is the friend of the Cantonese, but the ways of the "heathen Chinee" are no more "peculiar" than those of General Feng who is a Christian according to his lights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA: To Be Partitioned? | 12/20/1926 | See Source »

...theatre building and drew bogus checks. Mr. Roedel's duplicity had been discovered through his girl friend, aged 19, whose heart he had won with free cinema tickets and whom he had taken to live with him in a $325-per-month Fifth Avenue apartment in his sudden, ill-got prosperity. She had given him away by bragging to an old friend of Mr. Roedel's, the box office man of another theatre, about the new ice-making machine in her $325 apartment...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Pidgin Ad | 12/13/1926 | See Source »

From the moment when this throw back to the Eighteenth Century begins to send laughter into the happy hearts of the better Bostonians to that sudden descent of the curtain which ends the show there in no time when anyone dares to remember that he paid so and so for his ticket. Perhaps Mr. Leo Bulgakov of the Moscow Art Theatre is doing better justice to Gozzi at the Provincetown than could ever be done on the shores of Brattle, but Stark Young would have to admit that this is an improvement over "Brown of Harvard"-with all due justice...

Author: By D. G. G., | Title: "ORANGE COMEDY" SCORES ON HUMOR | 12/8/1926 | See Source »

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