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Examples

  • Interestingly, the German word for automobile, “Fahrzeug,” neatly skirts Goethe’s cavil, since it’s not built out of the Greek OR Latin words for “self” and “move” but — very eloquently, in my view — from the German words for “drive” and “thing.”

    The Volokh Conspiracy » “Misused”: 2007

  • Interestingly, 'bigot' was the code word for the WW2 Ultra decrypts from Bletchley Park; if you were one of the few with access, such as Winston Churchill, you were called 'bigoted'.

    Telegraph.co.uk: news, business, sport, the Daily Telegraph newspaper, Sunday Telegraph 2010

  • Interestingly though, the English word 'tinsel' is actually taken, not from German but from the French word 'estincele', which translates roughly as 'sparkle'. deklin42, posted this comment on Dec 3rd, 2009

    Quazen 2009

  • Interestingly from a marketing perspective the videos, which wouldn’t have been cheap to produce, have hardly set the world alight.

    2008 September « Squash 2008

  • Interestingly from a marketing perspective the videos, which wouldn’t have been cheap to produce, have hardly set the world alight.

    Google’s take on The Office « Squash 2008

  • Interestingly, that is at odds with the European Central Bank, whose view is heavily influenced by the hyperinflation of Germany's Weimar Republic.

    The Lure of Inflation's Siren Song David Reilly 2010

  • Interestingly, that is at odds with the European Central Bank, whose view is heavily influenced by the hyperinflation of Germany's Weimar Republic.

    The Lure of Inflation's Siren Song David Reilly 2010

  • Interestingly, the Greek word for God, theo, is where we get our English words the, thee, this, thou, and so forth.

    God is Not a Christian, Nor a Jew, Muslim, Hindu … Carlton Pearson 2010

  • Interestingly, that is at odds with the European Central Bank, whose view is heavily influenced by the hyperinflation of Germany's Weimar Republic.

    The Lure of Inflation's Siren Song David Reilly 2010

  • Interestingly, that is at odds with the European Central Bank, whose view is heavily influenced by the hyperinflation of Germany's Weimar Republic.

    The Lure of Inflation's Siren Song David Reilly 2010

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