Word: utmost
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...word; most isolationists did not like to be called that. "These policies I have suggested," said Herbert Hoover, "would be no isolationism. Indeed, they are the opposite. They would avoid rash involvement of our military forces in hopeless campaigns. They do not relieve us of working to our utmost . . . We shall not fail in this even if we have to stand alone...
...happens this observer, thanks to the utmost kindness of a Harvard brethren, has a copy of that magazine and, here's where the frustration comes in, we can't see what's so damn sexually illicit about...
...Asked Congress, in a special presidential message, to vote nearly $18 billion more "with the utmost speed" to carry on the fight in Korea and to prepare U.S. forces for possible action anywhere else in the world. The request was designed to raise the armed forces to 2,771,121 men by next June, including 1,264,900 in the Army which had only 593,000 men when the Korean war began. Since then 130,000 reserves have been called to active duty, 100,800 men have been drafted, 50,000 National Guardsmen have been federalized, about...
Trevor Howard is completely fitting as the grim pebbly faced Englishman, for whom an almost unnoticeable muscular movement is sufficient to turn a rapturous smile into a scowl of the utmost malevolence. Anouk is one of the newer French exports; her nose is larger than most, but otherwise she is cut from the whole cloth...
...Your statement that it "blunts initiative and drive of the House Dance Committees to work hard and plan well" is false. Each Dance Committee does its utmost to provide their House with the best dance possible. They all work together to increase the total sales for the bettermen of their individual Houses. We all have top grade expensive orchestras (George Graham, Chappie Arnold, Gene Dennis, Harvardians, and Kent Bartlett) and high quality entertainment for the 1950 Harvard-Yale dances. The inter-House solidarity permits economy of advertising and ticket printing, thus leaving more funds for more expensive items...