Exact(1)
Down the decades, it was occasionally reprinted, and eventually reached Steingarten in a tattered article from a 1957 Gourmet and a quote from Robert Benchley, the humourist, which read: "Several years ago, I ate a turkey prepared and roasted by Morton Thompson.
Similar(59)
The Japanese government's promises to throw money at its shrinking economy and, especially, its tattered banking system (see article) have given the stockmarket a short-term stimulus.
Their grandmother shared pictures of their mother's favorite horse, Molly, and tattered newspaper clippings of articles she wrote as a student journalist.
The yearbooks look a little tattered and the students a bit older, but the article catches the spirit of Baghdad College that still lives and breathes in the hearts of the alumni who attended Baghdad College and Al Hikma University.
It was exceedingly amusing to see here a ragged fellow regaling himself with a box of pickled oysters or potted lobster; there another cutting into a cheese of enormous size, or emptying a bottle of champagne; while hundreds were engaged in opening the packages of boots and shoes and other clothing, and fitting themselves with articles of apparel to replace their own tattered garments".
In a post-P.T.S.D. world, the audience sympathizes with Brody, Lewis's emotionally tattered soldier, on a level that the readers of Kinkead's 1957 article, or Richard Condon's novel, never could.
The New Yorker, February 22 , 1964P. 23 A Beacon Hill matron, who hates to part with anything that has been in her family for more than a year, recently found the following note attached to a clean but tattered bedsheet just returned from the laundry: Dear Customer: Upon examination, we find that this article has received its maximum wear.
By Talbot Aldrich and Burton Bernstein The New Yorker, February 22 , 1964P. 23 A Beacon Hill matron, who hates to part with anything that has been in her family for more than a year, recently found the following note attached to a clean but tattered bedsheet just returned from the laundry: Dear Customer: Upon examination, we find that this article has received its maximum wear.
According to sportswriter William Oscar Johnson in a 1980 article in Sports Illustrated, Brundage was "the kind of man whom Horatio Alger had canonized the American urchin, tattered and deprived, who rose to thrive in the company of kings and millionaires".
His reputation tattered.
No tattered tomes to touch.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com