Join two wayward radio hosts on A Way With Words, the call-in radio show about writing, speaking, slang, old sayings, and more.
Catchword for “heater”
Catchword: heater
Part of Speechn.
The part of speech reflects that used in the full entry, and not necessarily the part of speech as it is used in the quotation below.
Quotation: “The thing that I’m concerned about,” Echeles said, “is that this was the first ‘heater’ case for Judge Themis Karnezis.…” “What do you mean by a “heater’ case?” I asked. Echeles sighed at my lack of knowledge. “A heater case is one that brings a lot of press coverage, like the Marquette 10 or any Greylord case.”
Article or Document Title:
“Echeles is up to elbows in case of fugitive killer”
Author:
Tom Fitzpatrick
Article, Document, Publication, Web Site:
Chicago Sun-Times
Date of Publication:
July 24, 1986
Page Number:
7
This cite belongs to a full entry for heater.
Recent Catchwords
park v. (5/16)
whale eye n. (5/16)
water buffalo n. (5/16)
Churchill n. (5/15)
moondust n. (5/15)
mouse type n. (5/14)
hung up adj. (5/14)
sideways market n. (5/14)
Bristol dust n. (5/14)
YAWN n. (5/13)
doodlesocking n. (5/13)
job and knock n. (5/13)
radwaste n. (5/12)
night-out money n. (5/12)
podbusting n. (5/12)
yoging n. (5/12)
 More catchwords...
Sponsored links:
New Comments
GW commented on güey (5/16)
Jak King commented on hardening off (5/16)
Jay DeKing commented on hardening off (5/15)
C.L.Mangles commented on job and knock (5/13)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Thomas commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/12)
Rock-hound commented on fobbit (5/12)
chris commented on fobbit (5/12)
Driver Joe commented on brown gas (5/11)
Jan commented on tom-walkers (5/11)
Jak King commented on nightstand Buddhist (5/11)
Karl Benghauser commented on jingle mail (5/10)
Thomas commented on cat-claw (5/10)
Richard William Walker commented on cat-claw (5/10)
Subscribe to the RSS feed.Subscribe to the mailing list.Browse the archive.Add to Technorati Favorites. © 1999-2008 by Grant Barrett, Double-Tongued Dictionary, New York City.