Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at lubitz.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Lubitz.

Examples

  • What I've been able to admire of his acting is merely a prelude to this weekend: come see him perform as Dr. Lubitz tonight through Sunday!

    Brendan McMahon: I Love My Job Brendan McMahon 2011

  • For five performances last weekend, John Patrick Driscoll, our Revolutionary Soldier and fight captain, took up the complex and challenging role of Dr. Lubitz.

    Brendan McMahon: Good Fortune for Off-Broadway's Manipulation Brendan McMahon 2011

  • What I've been able to admire of his acting is merely a prelude to this weekend: come see him perform as Dr. Lubitz tonight through Sunday!

    Brendan McMahon: I Love My Job Brendan McMahon 2011

  • What I've been able to admire of his acting is merely a prelude to this weekend: come see him perform as Dr. Lubitz tonight through Sunday!

    Brendan McMahon: I Love My Job Brendan McMahon 2011

  • When Janet Davis, a planner at Lubitz Financial in Miami, took a good look at the stacks of financial records Dana Dwyer brought into her office, she thought: "Hmmmm. Dana thinks she's organized, but she's not."

    A: Going without coverage a big mistake 2006

  • According to James Lubitz, the acting chief of the aging and chronic-disease statistics branch of the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, there is no a priori reason to suppose that lifespan extension will be cheaper, that the treatments will have to be administered less frequently, or that their inventors will agree to be less well compensated.

    The Coming Death Shortage 2005

  • Simple arithmetic shows that if 80 million U.S. senior citizens were to receive $15,000 worth of treatment every year, the annual cost to the nation would be $1.2 trillion — "the kind of number," Lubitz says, "that gets people's attention."

    The Coming Death Shortage 2005

  • According to James Lubitz, the acting chief of the aging and chronic-disease statistics branch of the CDC National Center for Health Statistics, there is no a priori reason to suppose that lifespan extension will be cheaper, that the treatments will have to be administered less frequently, or that their inventors will agree to be less well compensated.

    The Coming Death Shortage 2005

  • Simple arithmetic shows that if 80 million U.S. senior citizens were to receive $15,000 worth of treatment every year, the annual cost to the nation would be $1.2 trillion — "the kind of number," Lubitz says, "that gets people's attention."

    The Coming Death Shortage 2005

  • Before Thursday, Max Lubitz, 25, a military officer who is on leave at Tinker Air Force Base near Oklahoma City, had been torn between voting for Mr. Gingrich or Mr. Santorum.

    NYT > Home Page By MANNY FERNANDEZ 2012

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.