Definitions
Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at disintegration.
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Support
Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Disintegration.
Examples
-
She wrote a song with producer Larry Klein called "Disintegration Man," for her upcoming album Slingshot, and the second I heard it -- I told her it was what John Lennon used to call a "Who Is It song."
Scott Mehno: Rebecca Pidgeon's "Disintegration Man" Is a True Who Is It Song Scott Mehno 2011
-
She wrote a song with producer Larry Klein called "Disintegration Man," for her upcoming album Slingshot, and the second I heard it -- I told her it was what John Lennon used to call a "Who Is It song."
The Full Feed from HuffingtonPost.com Scott Mehno 2011
-
In the book, "Disintegration," I talk a bit about the Shaw neighborhood and how it ratcheted down from being a vibrant black community with theaters and all the great entertainers performed there in the '30s,' 40s and '50s.
-
In the book, "Disintegration," I talk a bit about the Shaw neighborhood and how it ratcheted down from being a vibrant black community with theaters and all the great entertainers performed there in the '30s,' 40s and '50s.
-
Eugene Robinson's new book, "Disintegration," opens with an account of a Washington dinner party dripping with influential Americans whom the reader can only assume are white.
Book Review: Eugene Robinson's 'Disintegration: The Splintering of Black America' Lawrence Jackson 2010
-
Eugene Robinson's new book, "Disintegration," opens with an account of a Washington dinner party dripping with influential Americans whom the reader can only assume are white.
Book Review: Eugene Robinson's 'Disintegration: The Splintering of Black America' Lawrence Jackson 2010
-
In the book, "Disintegration," I talk a bit about the Shaw neighborhood and how it ratcheted down from being a vibrant black community with theaters and all the great entertainers performed there in the '30s,' 40s and '50s.
-
Eugene Robinson's new book, "Disintegration," opens with an account of a Washington dinner party dripping with influential Americans whom the reader can only assume are white.
Has success torn apart the black community? Lawrence Jackson 2010
-
In this aspect of the question, we would remind our readers of the words used in our article on 'Disintegration' not three years ago: --
The Quarterly Review, Volume 162, No. 324, April, 1886 Various
-
Eugene Robinson, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, has a new book out, "Disintegration,"
The Seattle Times 2011
Comments
Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.