Citations:frindle

English citations of frindle

Noun: pen edit

1996 1999 2000 2010 2012 2013
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1996, Andrew Clements, Frindle, New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, →ISBN, →LCCN, LCC PZ7.C59118 Fr 1996, Chapter 6:
    “A frindle,” and this time Nick pointed at the ballpoint pens behind her on the shelf. “A black one, please.”
  • 1999 September 20, Jan Landon, “Children mark ballots 'Frindle'”, in The Topeka Capital-Journal[1], retrieved 2014-05-17:
    When making a grocery list, what color of frindle do you use? Do you like slim or fat frindles? Erasable or permanent?
  • 2000 June 20, Phil Hays, “Re: Global warming theorists need cooling down”, in talk.environment[2] (Usenet), message-ID <39504A4C.88A20487@sprynet.com>:
    Next thing you will be explaining why multistage turbines are more efficient than single stage turbines, or giving away pointers to tables or graphs of the thermodynamic properties of steam.. oh excuse me "H2O vapor". Or telling Wm James what a frindle is.
  • 2010 March, Erica K. Jacobsen with Laura E. Slocum, “Putting Frindle to Paper”, in Journal of Chemical Education, volume 87, number 83, →DOI, page 233:
    I used a frindle to write my initial notes for this introduction. Ideas tend to strike when I head to bed at night, so I like to keep a frindle and paper on my nightstand to capture them.
  • 2010 April 12, “Written with a frindle”, in KCMetropolis.org[3], retrieved 2014-05-17:
    Ron Megee supplied the frindles, and other props.
  • 2012 January 27, Dana Cohen-Kaplan, “Catch-22 offers new perspective on war”, in The Lion's Roar[4], volume 28, number 6, Newton South High School, Newton, Massachusetts, page 24:
    Not often in the history of the English language do we get a word from the title of a book. Sure, some people will know what you're talking about if you ask to borrow a frindle, but most people will look at you funny or think you're in seventh grade.
  • 2013 December 18, Stephanie A. James, “AES students learn about capitalism with Market Fest project”, in Times-Virginian[5]:
    “Buy a frindle, get a free candy cane,” belted out Appomattox Elementary School fourth grader Megan Drinkard.
    Enticing buyers to shop at her station and get a free treat in exchange, she – along with other students on her team – sold decorative pens also known as frindles during the school’s first Market Fest on Friday.