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Week Optical Materials Engineering News
Advanced Coating & Surface Technology, Electronic Materials Technology News, Flame Retardancy News, High Tech Ceramics News, Innovator's Digest, Technology Access Report, Inside R&D, Japan Science Scan, New Technology Week, Optical Materials & Engineering News, Performance Materials, Surface Modification Technology News, Genetic Technology News, Battery & Ev Technology, and much more.
— from The Online World by Odd De Presno

which of my English neighbours
You should be my neighbours, and, if so, my friends; for which of my English neighbours have reason to be otherwise?
— from Ivanhoe: A Romance by Walter Scott

weight of multitudes every nerve
Instead of accepting this bold defiance, the emperor Michael, the son and colleague of Andronicus, resolved to oppress them with the weight of multitudes: every nerve was strained to form an army of thirteen thousand horse and
— from The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Table of Contents with links in the HTML file to the two Project Gutenberg editions (12 volumes) by Edward Gibbon

world one must expect no
No, mon cousin ,” she added with a sigh, “I shall always remember that in this world one must expect no reward, that in this world there is neither honor nor justice.
— from War and Peace by Tolstoy, Leo, graf

where one might easily name
Of Books of Travel, here are a dozen titles, where one might easily name twelve hundred:— Edmondo de Amicis,—"Holland and Its People," and his "Constantinople.
— from Pushing to the Front by Orison Swett Marden

Worthy of more extended notice
Worthy of more extended notice than the limits of this chapter will permit is "The Book of Church Order" of the Presbyterian Church in the United States.
— from Presbyterian Worship: Its Spirit, Method and History by Robert Johnston

worthy of more extended notice
A few of the most remarkable of these feuds have been deemed worthy of more extended notice, and the first among the number concerns the quarrel between the Buondelmonti and the Amedei, in Florence, in the thirteenth century.
— from Women of the Romance Countries by John R. (John Robert) Effinger

worthy of more extended notice
The incident referred to in this letter with regard to the nomination for the Vice-Presidency by the Democratic Convention is worthy of more extended notice.
— from Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume II by Samuel Finley Breese Morse

wrench of my entire nervous
With a wrench of my entire nervous system I, in one agonizing second, completely dislocated the prejudices of a lifetime, and rose to the situation confronting me.
— from The Book of Susan: A Novel by Lee Wilson Dodd

words one may even now
In other words, one may even now develop spiritual powers of consciousness which will not become the common property of the race until after long ages of gradual development under the law of evolution.
— from The Hindu-Yogi Science of Breath by William Walker Atkinson

whole of my experience never
My opinion is that if you go on a keeper’s ground and do what is right, you will be able to go again, for in the whole of my experience never having carried any nets but Rat nets when on private estates, I have the consolation of knowing that I should always be welcome on going again to such estates.
— from Full Revelations of a Professional Rat-catcher After 25 Years' Experience by Ike Matthews


This tab, called Hiding in Plain Sight, shows you passages from notable books where your word is accidentally (or perhaps deliberately?) spelled out by the first letters of consecutive words. Why would you care to know such a thing? It's not entirely clear to us, either, but it's fun to explore! What's the longest hidden word you can find? Where is your name hiding?



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