Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297> ?p ?o }
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- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 first "Robert".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 isCitedBy Highbrow.
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 last "Hendrickson".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 location "New York".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 publisher "Facts on File".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 quote "New York Sun reporter Will Irvin popularized 'highbrow,' and its opposite 'lowbrow' in 1902, basing his creation on the wrongful notion that people with high foreheads have bigger brains and are more intelligent and intellectual than those with low foreheads. At first the term was complimentary, but 'Tristi' came to be at best a neutral word.)".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 title "Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins".
- e4f091094aa60689dcdd81d580fad307bc9234a456e9b7f2d7210e71a9aa9297 year "1997".