User:Visviva/NYT 20070724

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This is a list of lowercase non-hyphenated single words found in the 2007-07-24 issue of the New York Times which did not have English entries in the English Wiktionary when this list was created (2009-02-11).

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Contents


96372 tokens ‧ 71640 valid lowercase tokens ‧ 8791 types ‧ 47 (~ 0.535%) words before cleaning ‧ 

2007-07-24 [edit]

  1. amikacin
    • 2007 July 24, Lawrence K. Altman, “TB Tests Show Promise, but Flaws Limit Progress”, New York Times:
      XDR strains are resistant to both isoniazid and rifampicin as well as to any member of the fluoroquinolone antibiotic class of second-line drugs and to at least one of three injectable second-line drugs like amikacin, capreomycin and kanamycin.
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  2. antituberculosis
  3. aponeurotomies
    • 2007 July 24, Kate Murphy, “Straightening Bent Fingers, No Surgery Required”, New York Times:
      He returned to Paris in 2005 to receive training in the technique. Dr. Kline said he had since performed more than 600 needle aponeurotomies, in addition to continuing to practice emergency medicine, at Holy Rosary Medical Center, in Ontario, Ore.
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  4. aponeurotomy
    • 2007 July 24, Kate Murphy, “Straightening Bent Fingers, No Surgery Required”, New York Times:
      The recurrence rate for needle aponeurotomy is around 50 percent after three years, according to several studies published in French medical journals.
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  5. aviophobes
  6. capreomycin
    • 2007 July 24, Lawrence K. Altman, “TB Tests Show Promise, but Flaws Limit Progress”, New York Times:
      XDR strains are resistant to both isoniazid and rifampicin as well as to any member of the fluoroquinolone antibiotic class of second-line drugs and to at least one of three injectable second-line drugs like amikacin, capreomycin and kanamycin.
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  7. enbubbled
    • 2007 July 24, Dave Kehr, “New DVDs”, New York Times:
      Swim, sister, swim: Esther Williams enbubbled in “Bathing Beauty” (1944), her first starring vehicle.
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  8. fasciectomy
    • 2007 July 24, Kate Murphy, “Straightening Bent Fingers, No Surgery Required”, New York Times:
      Studies in the British and American medical literature indicate that the recurrence rate for fasciectomy, or surgical removal of the diseased fascia, is 40 percent after five years.
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  9. fasciotomy
    • 2007 July 24, Kate Murphy, “Straightening Bent Fingers, No Surgery Required”, New York Times:
      The procedure, called needle aponeurotomy or percutaneous fasciotomy, involves using the bevel of a hypodermic needle to essentially shred the ropes of constricting fascia characteristic of Dupuytren’s disease.
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  10. forceout
  11. involvements
    • 2007 July 24, Joseph Kahn, “Barclays Increases Bid for ABN Amro”, New York Times:
      The involvements by the China Development Bank, which two months ago agreed to pay $3 billion for a stake in the Blackstone Group ’s initial public offering, and Temasek, which already owns stakes in other banks, mostly in Asia, reflect a push by the region’s financial institutions on increased foreign lending .
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  12. loucheness
    • 2007 July 24, Ben Brantley, “When Trust Is Lost, Only Disconnect”, New York Times:
      The macho loucheness of Mr. Stephens’s Jerry never disguised a needling, pose-thwarting insecurity. Mr. West’s very fine, ferociously passive-aggressive Robert laid bare the emptiness in the satisfaction of having the upper hand, while Ms. Kirwan located a pained, self-defeating longing for an idea of home that Emma could never hope to achieve.
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  13. micromanager
  14. militarylike
  15. multihomer
  16. nanometallurgy
  17. nondriver
  18. nonhormonal
  19. nonpremium
    • 2007 July 24, Stephen Labaton, “Radio Plan: A Price Shift for Satellite”, New York Times:
      For $6.99 a month, the other would enable listeners to choose 50 of the nonpremium channels, with each additional channel costing 25 cents.
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  20. nonwaiver
  21. postlunch
    • 2007 July 24, Joe Sharkey, “Somewhere in the Skies, Fish Ceviche Is Being Served”, New York Times:
      The meeting was held during the postlunch lull at the Gotham Bar and Grill in New York, where Mr. Portale is the owner and executive chef. Mr. Freidanck arrived lugging a box of dishes, like someone moving between apartments in Manhattan.
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  22. ratly
  23. reperformed
    • 2007 July 24, Bernard Holland, “Debussy’s Ghost Is Playing, So What Can a Critic Say?”, New York Times:
      This CD has five of the Book 1 “Préludes,” the “Children’s Corner,” “La Plus Que Lente,” “La Soirée dans Grenade” and “D’un Cahier d’Esquisses,” all reperformed on a restored Feurich Welte piano in Mr. Caswell’s home.
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  24. restick
  25. saloniste
    • 2007 July 24, Michelle Green, “The Bloomsburys and Other Marital Experimenters”, New York Times:
      Lady Ottoline Morrell, the extravagant saloniste whose lovers included Bertrand Russell, was among those who insisted on preserving a marriage even in the face of disaster: a weak-willed, emotionally fragile politician, Philip Morell had a near-breakdown in his wife’s presence when he “launched into a wild confession that he had not one but two pregnant mistresses.”
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  26. semiregular
  27. shopowner
  28. soundgram
    • 2007 July 24, Natalie Angier, “Smart, Curious, Ticklish. Rats?”, New York Times:
      They laugh when tickled, especially when they’re young, and they have ticklish spots; tickle the nape of a rat pup’s neck and it will squeal ultrasonically in a soundgram pattern like that of a human giggle.
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  29. streetside
  30. stymieing
  31. supergluing
    • 2007 July 24, Henry Fountain, “‘Didn’t You Pummel Me?’ Crayfish Remember Before a Rematch”, New York Times:
      In their experiments, described in Biology Letters, they disabled the claws of the winner of the first fight by supergluing them shut and let the two crayfish go at each other a half-hour later and 24 hours later.
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  32. talkfest
    • 2007 July 24, Adam Nossiter, “Standing Against the War, but Unsure How to End It”, New York Times:
      The voters here do not blame Congress for gridlock and mixed signals, saying they expected little in the first place. Mr. Walz is seen as a lone voice, principled but powerless in the morass; the recent all-night Senate talkfest barely registered here on the continuum of perceived inaction.
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  33. teashop
  34. tilefish
    • 2007 July 24, Diane Cardwell, “High Mercury Levels Found in One-Fourth of Adults”, New York Times:
      Still, officials said that young children and pregnant and breast-feeding women should avoid high-mercury species like Chilean sea bass, orange roughy and tilefish, while eating limited quantities of low-mercury fish.
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  35. trimuons
    • 2007 July 24, Dennis Overbye, “At Fermilab, the Race Is on for the ‘God Particle’”, New York Times:
      He heard a rumor, while spending a year at Stanford, that collisions at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory were spitting out weird triplets of particles known as muons, which are sort of fat electrons. Dr. Weinberg canceled reservations at a lodge in Yosemite National Park to spend the weekend with his colleague Benjamin Lee, trying to concoct a theory to explain the trimuons.
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  36. unwedded
  37. utilityman
    • 2007 July 24, Ben Shpigel, “Mets Will Listen to Offers, but Could Stay With Gotay”, New York Times:
      Growing up in Puerto Rico, Gotay would listen to clubhouse tales spun by his father and his uncle, Julio Gotay, who played 10 major league seasons as a utilityman in the 1960s.
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Sequestered [edit]