#176401 - 07/11/08 09:26 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
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hippocampus (hip-uh-KAM-puhs), plural: hippocampi
1. a mythical sea creature with the head and forelegs of a horse and a body ending in a fishlike or dolphin -like tail. Also hippocamp. 2. a genus of fish belonging to the family Syngnathidae, commonly called seahorses. 3. a part in each half of the brain that in cross section has the shape of a seahorse
[from Greek hippokampos : hippos, horse + kampos, sea monster.]
hippocampal, adj.
“The very hormones that flood the brain to mobilize it in the face of an overwhelming threat can be toxic to cells in the hippocampus, the studies suggest.” -Daniel Goleman, “Severe Trauma May Damage The Brain as Well as the Psyche,” The New York Times, Aug. 1, 1996
“Scientists have found that monkeys are constantly making new brain cells in the hippocampus, an area of the brain used for forming long-term memories…” -Gina Kolata, “Studies Find Brain Grows New Cells” The New York Times, March 17, 1998
“When people learn to navigate through a new environment, they presumably form patterns in their hippocampuses which are later processed in sleep and stored throughout brain. Thus ability to find one's way around a new city should improve after a night's sleep. The same may be true for students who cram for an examination. Experiments done in Canada show that students who get some sleep after studying for an exam retain more information than those who stay awake overnight.” -Sandra Blakeslee, “2 Studies Suggest Sleep Is Vital in Consolidating Memories,” The New York Times, July 29, 1994
“''To simplify greatly, the hippocampus seems to be the focal point for cognition and the amygdala for emotion,'' Dr. LeDoux said. ''The hippocampus, for instance, is involved in recognizing a face and its significance, such as that it's your cousin. The amygdala adds that you really don't like him. It offers emotional reactions from memory, independent of your thoughts at the moment about something.” –Daniel Goleman, “Brain’s Desigh Emerges As a Key to Emotions” The New York Times, August 15, 1989
“Galatea, fleeing on a hippocampus, looks back towards the Cyclops. He right hand rests on the croup of the sea horse, while the left, embracing its neck, supports a red mantle which falls to below the loins. The red drapery and the black mane of the hippocampus throw the whiteness of the nymph’s flesh into high relief.” -Baston Boissier, D. Havelock Fisher; Rome and Pompeii Archaeological Rambles, p. 107, (1896)
“The female hippocampus, when the abdomen is enlarged with eggs, opens the male marsupial pouch, by means of the small anal fin of five rays, and appendage not existing in the male, and transfers from herself to the being to become the father, the ova for fecundation.” - Richard Hill, A Week at Port-Royal, (1855)
Attachments
 (1250 downloads) Description: Bouguereau, William-Adolphe, 'Arion on a Sea Horse,' 1855
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#176766 - 07/14/08 07:46 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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All 34 Anglo-Saxon runes
rune (roon), noun
1. characters of the earliest German alphabet 2. a writing in those characters 3. a poem, song; a saying with mysterious meaning, esp. a magical charm 4. a secret or mysterious sign or symbol
runic, runelike, adj. runestone, noun : In Viking times a raised stone with a runic inscription in memory of men. “The runic alphabet, or Futhark, gets its name from its first six sounds (f, u, th, a, r, k), much like the word 'alphabet' derives from the first two letters of the Greek alphabet, alpha and beta. Each rune not only represents a phonetic sound but also has its own distinct meaning often connected with Norse mythology.” - http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/vikings/runes.html ''Like yin and yang, like the Christian cross and the star of Israel, Mickey can be seen everywhere -- a sign, a rune, a hieroglyphic trace of a secret power, an electricity we want to plug into,'' John Updike wrote in his introduction to ''The Art of Mickey Mouse,'' a 1991 collection of Mickey Mouse images by various artists.” -Edward Lewine, “Who Is He?” The New York Times, Aug. 10, 1997
“I asked a waitress what she knew about the museum and its Kensington Runestone, a large, flat rock that bears a runic inscription supposedly carved by Vikings in 1362, . . . "Never heard of it," she said.” –Steve Dougherty, “Highway 61, Visited” The New York Times, Sep. 11, 2005
“To learn to write was an ancient Celtic fear, an accomplishment charged with retribution and with danger. Caesar, encountering the Celts, judged their belief to be that knowledge, rite, wisdom, rune -- those who could write of those things held power, those who could write of the arcane, of rite and of worship, were people who deserved to be, who must be feared." -Marianne Wiggins, “Bet they’ll Miss Us When We’re Gone,” HarperCollins
“But the most impressive, perhaps, was the most common: a version of Coltrane's ''Moment's Notice,'' which began in runic phrases and worked up to an outpouring, at which point the melody finally emerged.” –Ben Ratliff, “ Jazz Review; A Well-Traveled Drummer,” The New York Times, Dec. 24, 2004
“At Jelling lie the burial mounds of the first historical king and queen of Denmark, and the rune stone that has been called Denmark's baptismal certificate. The mighty grave mounds are reputedly those of King Gorm and Queen Thyra, and the smaller of two rune stones is Gorm's tribute to his dead consort. The larger stone, carved with lions and serpents and the crucified Christ, was raised by Gorm's son, King Harald Bluetooth, in memory of his father. And Harald records in the runes that he himself united Denmark, and conquered Norway, and ''made the Danes Christian.''” –Geoffrey Bibby, “Jutland of the Vikings” The New York Times, March 15, 1987
“I most likely viewed the Waffen S.S. as an élite unit that was sent into action whenever a breach in the front line had to be stopped up. I did not find the double rune on the uniform collar repellent.” -Günter Grass, “How I Spent the War” The New Yorker, June 4, 2007 Write your name in runes.
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#176902 - 07/15/08 05:16 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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puerile (PYOO-uhr-uhl; PYOOR-uhl) adjective
1. belonging to a child or childhood; juvenile 2. lacking maturity; childish
[from Latin peurilis, from puer, “child, boy.”]
puerilely adverb puerility noun puerileness noun puerilism noun, Psychiatry: childishness in the behavior of an adult. “And, in one of the most puerile episodes of his adult career, he punishes his old schoolmates for being rich and vulgar by breaking into their houses to soak the labels off their boasted wine collections.” - Thomas R. Edwards, "Mordecai Richler Then and Now", New York Times, June 22, 1980
“Interestingly puerile is almost exclusively used in a pejorative way, whereas virile is used almost exclusively positively. Seems to suggest something similar about the tacit undesirability of boyishness. “ — Posted by Sam, The New York Times, May 23, 2008
Political argument is becoming a puerile cartoon about the moral . . . doing battle with the immoral. - George F. Will, "The Costs of Moral Exhibitionism", Washington Post, April 15, 2001
“His defense, however, could be in the lessening of offense-taking: Carlin may have reduced the power of odious obscenities and puerile profanity by devaluing their shock value, which was a perverse kind of linguistic service, as far as I’m concerned. “ -William Safire, “Fist Bump”, The New York Times, July 6, 2008
“. . . the dalliance of ''Fergie'' with a Texas millionaire while she was pregnant with her daughter Eugenie; this episode, coupled with the Duchess's continuing Concorde-jet life style while more than $7 million in debt, moved the editorialist to decry her ''puerile nature and incontinent ways'' and to denounce her behavior as ''louche and loose.''. . . . So there is our last Duchess hanging on The Times's wall, not only louche but also puerile, ''childish'' in the sense of ''silly'' (not ''childlike,'' which is cute), a 17th-century adjective from the Latin puer, ''boy.''” –William Safire, “Soccer Moms”, The New York Times, Oct. 27, 1996
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#177024 - 07/16/08 08:20 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
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Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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trifecta (TRAHY-fek-tuh) noun
1. a bet, esp. on a horse race, in which the 1st three winners must be selected in correct order. Also called a triple. 2. a race in which such bets are placed
origin 1970-75: tri + (per)fecta
In metaphoric usage inveterate gamblers might use this word as an old friend, (or foe, depending upon their luck); musicians might prefer “triad” a chord of three notes, and theologians “trinity.” "Trio" and "threesome" are other possibilities. Trifecta, however, carries with it the idea of three winners, which causes me to doubt some usages such as the trio of losers “disbelief, contempt and impatience” in the fifth quote below. Are “heat, humidity and haze” winners? Well, they are the perfect threesome for a stuffy afternoon. And another thing: at the races the trifecta must be bet in the exact order in which the winners eventually cross the line. Now is the trifecta of “Wine, Women and Song” in the correct winning sequence? There are nine possibilities and each could be the winning sequence: each race is different! “It was shortly before noon on a summer day with the treacherous trifecta of heat, humidity and haze foretelling afternoon thundershowers.” –Harry Hurt III, Executive Pursuits, NYTimes, July 12, 2008
“. . . vendors on hand, serving up elotes, the Mexican grilled ears of corn impaled on sticks and slathered with the unlikely trifecta of mayo, cheese and chili powder ($3).” -Peter Meehan, Treats for the Treasure Hunters, NYTimes, May 21, 2008
“Only one winning ticket was sold on the fourth-race trifecta at Garden State Park last Saturday, and it paid $85,198.50. The ticket holder asked to remain anonymous…” –G .F. T. Ryal, The Race Track, The New Yorker, Feb. 16, 1976
“. . .favorable reviews, in many of the most rarified venues . . . and a spot on the New York Times bestseller list. And then he hit the trifecta: his novel was selected for Oprah's Book Club, assuring him additional sales of perhaps a million copies or more. Franzen would be rich. “ –Scott Stossel, Elitism for Everyone, The Atlantic Magazine, Nov. 29, 2001
''It consists of equal parts disbelief, contempt and impatience -- practically a Yiddish trifecta,'' Mr. Wex writes.” –William Grimes, Books of the Times, NYTimes, Oct 17, 2007
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#177126 - 07/17/08 04:58 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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pejorate, (peh-JOR- ate; PEJ-or-ate) verb
1. to worsen in meaning, 2. to depreciate; to make or become worse
pejoration, noun, a change for worse
“I have long needed a verb for ''to worsen in meaning,'' and have just back-formed pejorate from pejorative, based on the Latin pejorare, ''to make worse.'' Now I can pejorate all I want; is this a great language, or what?” -William Safire, “Soccer Moms” The New York Times, Oct. 27 1996
“The relationship may even pejorate to the degree that the young man will tell Ariel to go away somewhere; the young artist may decide that he can do very well without an affair in which ‘sour silences appear.’ “ -Thomas R. Thornburg, Prospero, the Magician-artist, Auden’s The Sea and the Mirror, p. 30, (1969)
''I thank you for your friendly admonition relating to some un-usual words in the Pamphlet,'' Franklin wrote in 1760 to David Hume, the English philosopher, who apparently objected to the Americans' habit of turning nouns into verbs. ''The pejorate, and the colonize . . . I give up as bad. . . . The unshakeable, too, tho clear, I give up as rather low.'' -William Safire, “The Way We Live Now: 7-6-03: On Language; Miffy Prometheus” The New York Times, July 6, 2003
“Another example of pejoration is the word crafty, meaning at first simply skilled, especially in some handicraft. It has been suggested that words having to do with knowledge, wisdom skill and cleverness have a tendency to pejorate in English as if there were a resentment . . .” -Thomas S. Kane, Leonard J. Peters, A Practical Rhetoric of Expository Prose, p. 485, (1966)
“Although the verb forms ‘meliorate’ and ‘pejorate’ did appear in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries respectively, ‘pejorism’ has found no acceptance, while ‘meliorism’ has been used, following William James, to express the view that although the world is a mixture of good and evil, it can be bettered. . .” –Paul Edwards, The encyclopedia of Philosophy, Vols 1&2, p. 114, pub. 1967
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#177208 - 07/18/08 05:24 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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louche (loosh), adjective
of dubious taste or morality; decadent; disreputable
[French, from Old French losche, “squint-eyed”, feminine of lois, from Latin luscus, “blind in one eye.”]
louchely, adverb louchettes, pl. noun , goggles for correcting strabismus, a defect of vision in a squint-eyed or cross –eyed person, by allowing vision only directly to the front. “Wodehouse was the most undersexed and sweet-tempered of men, a stranger to the drunkenness and philandering that often enliven the biographies of English men of letters. McCrum tells the story judiciously, though he dithers around certain mysteries, such as the entanglements of Wodehouse’s wife with various louche men.” –Books Briefly Noted, Wodehouse by Robert McCrum, The New Yorker Magazine, Nov. 15, 2004
“In English, early in the 19th century, louche, pronounced ''loosh,'' came to mean ''oblique, not straightforward,'' and in a shameful linguistic abuse of a physical disability, has since pejorated to ''disreputable, indecent.'' “ -William Safire, “Soccer Moms”, The New York Times, Oct. 27, 1996
“Ignoring the ruckus, Mr. Cavalli ambled through the ancient farmhouse that he shares with his wife, their three children and a menagerie of parrots, Persian cats, a German shepherd and the zebra and lynx pelts that are his louchely extravagant signature as a fashion designer.”-Ruth La Ferla, “King of Zebra Prints Is Riding High”, The New York Times, Sept. 9, 2001
''It looks like we lead this louche, hedonistic life,'' he says, ''when, in fact, we're ordering seed catalogs. It's all the things we're not.'' -Simon Doonan quoted by Pilar Viladas, “That 70’s House”, The New York Times, Feb 18, 2005
“The liqueur, which is extremely bitter, is traditionally poured through a lump of sugar on a special slotted spoon, and mixed with five parts water. This creates what is known as the louche, a milky-white effect that occurs when compounds in the liqueur precipitate out of the absinthe-water solution.” –Henry Fountain, “Secrets of Fuel for Creative Fires Unlocked”, The New York Times, April 18, 2000
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#177593 - 07/21/08 05:28 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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quittance (KWIT-ns) noun
1. a release from debt, obligation or penalty 2. a document or certifying such a release 3. a repayment or recompense
[Middle English quitance, from Old French, from quiter, to free] “Omittance is no quittance.” -Shakespeare
“. . . I have sometimes esteemed as profit the ingratitudes, the offences, and indignities I had received of those to whom, either by nature or accidents, I was by way of friendship somewhat beholding; taking the occasion of their fault for a quittance and discharge of my debt.” -Michel de Montaigne, Essays Book III
“We both like quittance of the suit and tie, freedom from duty and detail and to breathe deeply the insouciant air of summer.” Thomas Lynch, Left Behind, NYTimes, Aug 17, 2005
“So long as he worked or waited, Madeline remained in New York, but when in February death gave him his quittance, she took her freedom too, with wide intentions and many coupons.” –Sara Jeanette Duncan, The Pool in the Desert
“Herman was thirteen at the time of his father's death and the abandonment haunts Moby-Dick. A general aura of quittance and ruin surrounded Melville all his life. His family had the bearings of failed aristocrats and this failure was vital to his world view.” –Lawrence Chua, The Stepmother World, Politics and Culture, www.aspen.conncoll.edu
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#177678 - 07/22/08 06:42 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
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Posts: 3883
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At left: Eustache Le Sueur - The Muse Terpsichore (1652-55) Louvre, Paris
terpsichorean (turp-si-kuh-REE-uhn, turp-si-KAWR-ee-uhn, -KOHR), adjective and noun
1. adj. of dancing or of, Terpsichore, the muse of dance 2. noun a dancer
terp, noun slang term for a dancer
[. . . from L. form of Gk Terpsikhore, muse of dancing and dramatic chorus. Hence theatrical slang terp "stage dancer, chorus girl" (1937). Her name is lit. "enjoyment of dance," from terpein "to delight" . . . + khoros "dance, chorus". . . ] -Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper “Alexander Pope, in his "Essay on Criticism," breathed life into the thought by using a terpsichorean metaphor: “True ease in writing comes from art, Not chance, As those move easiest who have learn'd To dance.”” -William Safire, On Language, NYTimes, Dec. 18, 1994
“Like a terpsichorean Thelma and Louise, these dancers are on a journey, progressing through various American landscapes.” –Holland Cotter, Art in Review, NYTimes, Mar. 30, 2007
“I don’t think his elders are doing him any favors by participating in these little demonstrations in front of the dugout. Of course, old Bob Gibson would have known how to deal with these little terpsichorean outbursts.” -George Vecsey, Up-and-Down Mets Might Have to Face the Music, NYTimes, July 12, 2007
“Dance companies, even the big ballet troupes, must furiously run in place, like terpsichorean hamsters, just to sustain themselves.” -John Rockwell, Dance; The Intimate, Unified Universe of Dance, NYTimes, Jan. 9, 2005
“But his real love is a belly dancer with a Southern drawl, Shivaree, who lives across the way and reads feet. ''Pedastry'' is what she calls it, and she describes herself as a high-class terpsichorean, not just another ''hootchy- kootchy dancer.'' “ –Alvin Klein, Theater in Review; ‘Shivaree’: New But Overwritten, NYTimes, April 1, 1984 “The choreography often resembles no more than synchronised fidgeting, and you can always spot a dearth of terpsichorean invention when dancers start doing sit-ups.” -The Sunday Times, 18 Nov. 2007 London
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#177780 - 07/23/08 05:03 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
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Posts: 3883
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Picture at right: Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn ca. 1963 ballerina (bal-un REE nuh) noun, fem.
1. a female ballet dancer 2. a ladies shoe or slipper - very low-heeled or heelless and resembling a ballet slipper.
[1792, from Italian, literally “dancing girl,” feminine of ballerino “dancer,” from ballo “a dance.”] bridal gem ballerina And the sight was so thoroughly familiar - the sleek [Merrill] Ashley carriage, the elegant neck, the long, quick legs, the huge hazel eyes staring levelly into that immeasurable space that is the realm of ballerinas only. –Glenn Collins, ‘The Anguish of an Injured Ballerina’ NYTimes, July 22, 2008
Anastasia Volochkova, the star ballerina, has carried out her threat to sue the Bolshoi Theater, which dismissed her in September amid accusations that she had grown too heavy to be lifted. . . . Ms. Volochkova, 27, who stands 5 feet 6 inches tall and says she weighs 109 pounds, told the Itar-Tass news. . . '' -Sophia Kishkovsky, ‘Arts Briefing: Highlights; Moscow: The Ballerina Sues,’ NYTimes, Oct. 27, 2003
In the nineteenth century, ballerinas were scolded for being too skinny. No amount of technique was as important as feminine allure--notably, an ample bosom. Today, a bosom is a rare sight on the ballet stage. The premium is on technique--the ability to do a lot of hard steps fast and clearly--and for that you must be thin. If you aren't, not only will you have to strain like mad but, by straining, you will risk injury, as will the men who have to lift you. –Joan Acocella, ‘A Ballerina Body’ The New Yorker, March 5, 2001
Like every one else in Rome, by this time, Miss Blanchard had an opinion on the young girl's beauty, and, in her own fashion, she expressed it epigrammatically. "She looks half like a Madonna and half like a ballerina," she said. –Henry James, ‘Roderick Hudson’
Someone said that Gellser, the great ballerina, complained that she had no silk stockings. The delegates were of the opinion that this was a slight matter. Not so Lenin. He frowned and said he would see to it that Gellser had everything she needed immediately. –Louise Bryant, ‘Mirrors of Moscow’
Lucca, as we know, had been a ballerina. Her toes were all twisted and deformed by her early years of dancing. She once showed them to me, a pitiful record of the triumphs of a ballet dancer. –Clara Louise Kellogg, ‘Memoirs of an American Prima Donna’ p. 246, (1913)
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#177946 - 07/24/08 05:06 PM
Re: Word of the Day
[Re: D. Allan]
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Panning for gold
Registered: 08/28/00
Posts: 3883
Loc: les Etats-Unis d'Amerique
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Shangai Ballet balletomane, noun
an enthusiast or admirer of ballet
balletomania, noun
[French ballet + Greek mane(s), ardent admirer] A man was shaving in front of the mirror when he noticed his twelve-year-old daughter watching him with an expression of startled pride. "Why, Daddy!, she exclaimed. "You're standing in the third position!" - Roger Angell, The Talk of the Town, "Balletomane," The New Yorker, August 30, 1958, p. 20
. . . Rudolf Nureyev, . . . . . . . the most influential, personality—as well as the greatest technician—since Nijinsky, to whom he is the first ever to be so compared. Ten days ago, he turned the comparison to visible truth at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, which was packed with balletomanes and vibrant with the kind of collective balletomania that used to seize upon the Diaghilev crowds on a great first night here. –Janet Flanner, Letter From Paris, ‘January 25,’ The New Yorker, Feb. 3, 1962
I had become a balletomane. Then in 1953, . . . the Martha Graham company came to the Saville. . . . Here was dance for our time, out of the museum. I ceased to be a balletomane, and became a lover of dance. –The New York Times, Books, Chapter One, ‘Speaking of Diaghilev’ by John Drummond
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