Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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"Cume" refers to the total number of listeners who tune in to a radio station during the course of a day for at least five minutes.
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Fired Up (Sony) 1,811 $3.8M (-31%) Wkd, Cume $10.1M
Rockin' Box Office Steve Hulett 2009
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Fired Up (Sony) $1.3M Fri (-40M), Wkd $4M, Cume $9M
Rockin' Box Office Steve Hulett 2009
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The International (Sony) $4.4M (-52%) Wkd 2,364, Cume $17M
The Box Office of Perry Steve Hulett 2009
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As of Arbitron's winter '04 Book, KFI AM-640 has become the No. 1 talk station in the country, beating out New York's WABC in both Cume and AQH for the coveted 25 — 54 audience.
Host 2005
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As of Arbitron's winter '04 Book, KFI AM-640 has become the No. 1 talk station in the country, beating out New York's WABC in both Cume and AQH for the coveted 25 — 54 audience.
Host 2005
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The like happened at Cume, during the time of the democracy, which Thrasymachus destroyed; and whoever considers what has happened in other states may perceive the same revolutions to have arisen from the same causes.
Politics: A Treatise on Government 384 BC-322 BC Aristotle
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The name is sometimes transcribed Cume, or even Cumae, possibly a source of confusion with Cumae in Italy.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery 1840-1916 1913
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The Cumæi, the inhabitants of Cume in Æolis, were reckoned very stupid.
Plutarch's Lives Volume III. 46-120? Plutarch 1839
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Cume for the 3D fantasy stands at $21.3 million as of March 30.
Variety.com 2010
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