The relationship between this society and the university strikes me as typicallyAmerican.
2
It was amusing, typicallyAmerican, naive, almost impossible from many points of view.
3
TypicallyAmerican and very unusual are Colin Campbell Cooper's New York street perspectives.
4
He is as intensely and as typicallyAmerican as Franklin or Emerson or Hawthorne.
5
The life of William McKinley was, from his birth to his death, typicallyAmerican.
6
I would say that it is not typicallyAmerican to have an excellent French accent.
7
A courage, moreover -thegambler's courage-thatis typicallyAmerican.
8
She is the oldest and, so far, the best developed of all the typicallyAmerican states.
9
The other was younger, not more than twenty-six perhaps, with the clean-cut, regular features we have come to consider typicallyAmerican.
10
As luck would have it, St. Lucia has more than enough beauty, stimulation and serenity for my typicallyAmerican four-day stay away.
11
Finally, he has compiled from the newspapers, as typicallyAmerican, many ghost stories of New York and other parts of the country.
12
Few Americans know him as a humorist, because his humor is not built on the broad, rough lines that are typicallyAmerican.
13
Again there were sounds much like a man's sobbing; but these were promptly blared down by a phonograph with a typicallyAmerican accent.
14
As one of my editors, typicallyAmerican, said to me: "It isn't worth all the trouble that you put into it."
15
No separateness or secession on the one side, nor bureaucracy on the other-thatis the typicallyAmerican idea that underlies the ideal telephone system.
16
Some of the chief needs of the peculiarly energetic, self-reliant, and typicallyAmerican white population of Alaska were set forth in my last message.