-
It's that peculiar French perversity that all of us who have our home here grow to know as l'exception francaise - the French exception.
BBC: Part Three - France and the World
-
You go on eBay and you'll see very, very cheap prices on things that, you know, you know at a sneaker boutique, either New York or L.A., you know, you pay hundreds of dollars for it.
NPR: Rapper 50 Cent in His Own Words
-
Don't know who Fred L. Worth is?
CNN: Google creates another time-waster with 'fun facts'
-
L.U. that some Justices know a Website from a legal cite probably won't be known for months.
CNN: Free Speech On The Net At The Supreme Court
-
Having lived in Cleveland, New York and Los Angeles, Nathaniel tells me, it's reassuring to be able to look up at the L.A. Times Building and know where he is.
NPR: The Redemptive Power of Music, and Friendship
-
"I don't know if I used the 'L-word' but I expressed internally that I was concerned, " Ewing said.
CNN: Deputy independent counsel says he wrote 'rough draft indictment' of Hillary Clinton
-
L. James's book, you will know that the Grey in question is one of the protagonists rather than a reference to a fashion lexicon.
WSJ: Tina Gaudoin on Style: Twenty Five Shades of You Know What��
-
Mr. COLEMAN: Oh, my primary influences musically are Charlie Daniels, Jerry Reed, Metallica, Run-DMC, L.L. Cool J, Dwight Yoakam, you know, people along those lines.
NPR: Cowboy Troy and 'Hick-Hop'
-
"What was important was his private conversations -- you know ... everybody say the l'avvocato told me, l'avvocato suggested me, I met the l'avvocato, I had a call in the early morning from the l'avvocato... to be in touch with him ... to be related to him ... was a state symbol for everybody, " journalist Carlo Rossella told CNN.
CNN: Agnelli: The playboy industrialist
-
But I don't know if you read that Jasmyne Cannick's piece in the L.A. Times over the weekend.
NPR: California Gay Leaders Assess Marriage Defeat
-
It will know you really meant to hit the "K" key on your screen when you hit the "L" key.
WSJ: The Future of Typing