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Examples

  • Michael Wex’s Born to Kvetch: Yiddish Language and Culture in All of Its Moods is entertaining, informative, sometimes uncomfortable, and uneven.

    2006 May 2006

  • The title was Moods, after an Emersonian epigram from his essay “Experience.”

    Louisa May Alcott Susan Cheever 2010

  • But since the quality of a Hypothetical Proposition is determined by the quality of its consequent, not at all by the quality of its antecedent, we cannot get from these two major premises any really new Moods, that is to say, Moods exhibiting any formal difference from the four previously expounded.

    Logic Deductive and Inductive Carveth Read 1889

  • "Moods", The World of Jack London web site, (April 2006).

    Complete Bibliography of Jack London's Poetry 2010

  • Another applicant, Fundisile "Moods" Guleni, who was never prosecuted, also took his seat at the hearing.

    ANC Daily News Briefing 1998

  • The following year, after having been twice re-written, "Moods" was brought out and, thanks to the "Hospital Sketches," had a ready sale.

    Daughters of the Puritans A Group of Brief Biographies Seth Curtis Beach 1884

  • She was very well satisfied with the reception of "Moods" at the time, though in after years when fifty thousand copies of a book would be printed as a first edition, the sale of "Moods" seemed to her inconsiderable.

    Daughters of the Puritans A Group of Brief Biographies Seth Curtis Beach 1884

  • In these happy conditions, Miss Alcott sat down to a more ambitious attempt at authorship and wrote the first rough draft of "Moods," a

    Daughters of the Puritans A Group of Brief Biographies Seth Curtis Beach 1884

  • We certainly wish these "Moods" had been less frequent, or not permitted to occupy a place near works which only make their deformity more obvious; when Mr.W. ceases to please, it is by

    Life of Lord Byron, Vol. 6 (of 6) With His Letters and Journals Thomas Moore 1815

  • We certainly wish these "Moods" had been less frequent, or not permitted to occupy a place near works which only make their deformity more obvious; when Mr.W. ceases to please, it is by

    The Works of Lord Byron: Letters and Journals. Vol. 1 George Gordon Byron Byron 1806

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