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It's an exercise using a stretch band to simulate rowing a boat. I need to know how long the exercise, or the expression, has been around. I use several techniques to determine whether a term is an oldie or a neologism. For instance, if I can't find a term in the usu online dictionaries, then I suspect it as recent However, I'm not entirely satisfied with such crude methods. Of course I could do better at this if I had a vast library or could afford subscription online services. However, on a fixed income I'm pretty much stuck with the free strategies; while I hate to be bothering you guys every time I need a reading Any suggestions appreciated--Thanks all | ||
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Dale's general "methodology" question is particularly timely for me, because one of my quote sources (Amazon search-inside-the-book) has recently changed in a way that makes it far less useful. My usual sources are
Any other ideas you might provide, for Dale's purposes or mine, would be appreciated. Thanks! | |||
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wc: Thank you most kindly for those search tips, which I've ensconced among my Faves I am interested in any such search facilities that come free | |||
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Incidentally, "band row" turns out to me one of many different kinds of "rows" using a resistance band. In all probability, therefore, the expr "band row" has been around for a very long time I was disappointed as I had expected it to mean a fight between the members of a rock band word: the Amazon search-inside-the-book is intriguing. To do a search of this kind, do you need to know the title of the book Thanks again | |||
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Forgive me for bubbling this one back up, but in the meantime I wondder if anyone else has heard the usage; whether you consider it a neologism or merely the concatenation of two common exercise terms | |||
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Never heard of it. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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ditto "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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