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Etymologies
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Examples
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All should possess some information and, viola, "I'm sure Dan Ruffert used to live in Cassady's last apartment," Tom belatedly reveals.
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All should possess some information and, viola, "I'm sure Dan Ruffert used to live in Cassady's last apartment," Tom belatedly reveals.
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Apparently borrowing Dennis Farina’s moustache and stripped down physically to not much more than leathery skin and sad eyes, Cassady is a dying shell of a man whose true motivations for going into the desert are less enlightened than he wants Wilton to believe.
DVD Review: The Men Who Stare At Goats « Screaming Blue Reviews 2010
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Apparently borrowing Dennis Farina’s moustache and stripped down physically to not much more than leathery skin and sad eyes, Cassady is a dying shell of a man whose true motivations for going into the desert are less enlightened than he wants Wilton to believe.
Review: The Men Who Stare At Goats « Screaming Blue Reviews 2009
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He becomes the club-hopping, coke-tooting sort of guy, however, very quickly after his wife Amanda, a model, leaves him, and he hooks up with party animal Tad Allagash, an Ivy League, upper Manhattan version of Kerouac’s Neal Cassady aka Dean Moriarty in On the Road.
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He becomes the club-hopping, coke-tooting sort of guy, however, very quickly after his wife Amanda, a model, leaves him, and he hooks up with party animal Tad Allagash, an Ivy League, upper Manhattan version of Kerouac’s Neal Cassady aka Dean Moriarty in On the Road.
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He becomes the club-hopping, coke-tooting sort of guy, however, very quickly after his wife Amanda, a model, leaves him, and he hooks up with party animal Tad Allagash, an Ivy League, upper Manhattan version of Kerouac’s Neal Cassady aka Dean Moriarty in On the Road.
100 Novels: A Point of View from You in Bright Lights, Big City « Exile on Ninth Street 2008
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I always thought, well, sure, I'll be Kerouac or Cassady.
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I always thought, well, sure, I'll be Kerouac or Cassady.
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I always thought, well, sure, I'll be Kerouac or Cassady.
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