Definitions
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Etymologies
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Examples
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BW3, was intentionally reminiscent of the acronym TW3 popularly used in referring to the television show That Was The Week That Was, a show of which co-founder James Disbrow was a fan.
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The original name and acronym, BW3, was intentionally reminiscent of the acronym TW3 popularly used in referring to the television show That Was The Week That Was, a show of which co-founder James Disbrow was a fan.
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But "TW3" would also appreciate BritWeek's ambassadorial role in spreading the culture from which it sprang and cementing the strong ties between Great Britain and Los Angeles.
Variety.com 2009
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Were "TW3" around today, it might have a field day with BritWeek -- which is not a week and not in Britain.
Variety.com 2009
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Arguably, it is a fifth charge against Macmillan that really sticks: his failure to catch the new tide of social liberalism, epitomised by such now over-familiar early 60s landmarks as Beyond the Fringe, TW3 and of course Philip Larkin's riff on "the Chatterley ban and the Beatles 'first LP".
Supermac: The Life of Harold Macmillan by DR Thorpe – review David Kynaston 2010
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Did Spitting Image, or Lloyd's earlier BBC2 success, Not the Nine O'Clock News, or That Was the Week that Was (TW3) – the BBC show that kick-started the genre in the 1960s and had the highest audience figures of its day – have a political impact?
Television satirists struggle to identify targets in the kingdom of the bland arts 2010
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Lloyd concedes that even TW3 was taken off after three series.
Television satirists struggle to identify targets in the kingdom of the bland arts 2010
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Physical description: Very handsome, like a movie star (TW3)
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First, the production team and performers should watch all available episodes of TW3.
The Guardian World News Dan Sabbagh 2011
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The promoter is: Pernod Ricard UK, Hounslow, TW3 1HY.
Home 2010
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