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Cocooning has been in our bank for thirty years.
Worries about such virtual cocooning may be exactly contrary to the truth.
"Cocooning will become burrowing," she said with great assurance.
"Cocooning" refers to the stay-at-home trend of the baby boom generation.
Since there is little in the area to attract visitors, such cocooning is in order.
Had Kirkland's warehouse been taller, the cocooning of four bays may not have been possible.
As it was, almost all the wondrous ice webbing and cocooning had broken up and collapsed.
For spring, expect the Faith Popcorn Cocooning collection.
Cocooning, say the experts, is an in-thing.
Not to mention "gated-community cocooning."
There have been plenty of generalizations about Americans' penchant for regional cocooning and their rampant Jetway aversion.
Mr. DeLorenzo said it's all part of the next trend, which he calls "the way we were," the follow-up to the current "cocooning."
The rise in sales is attributed in part to what the trend watcher Faith Popcorn has called the "cocooning" and "burrowing" stay-at-home habits of Americans.
Not surprisingly, capitalizing on the urge for this sort of brand cocooning has become the central preoccupation of the fashion, athletics and entertainment corporations selling these fetish brands.
A cynic might argue that all these activities qualify as "communal cocooning," that by its very nature life in a quiet, unassuming hamlet involves some form of villagewide intellectual vegetation.
Aircraft storage and the cocooning of some of these planes was the last major activity at Pyote Airfield, which was the responsibility of the 2753d Aircraft Storage Squadron.
Bush's reelection came as a big shock to some in the old media, like CBS MarketWatch commentator Jon Friedman, who deserves the 2004 Pauline Kael Award for liberal cocooning.
MATRIX The screaming winds of Cyberspace have created an elemental VORTEX around the emerging supernatural being... The cocooning of the two nervous systems in nearly complete.
A chapter in the book Haunted by Chuck Palahniuk has a character named Lady Baglady, who produces a short story called "Slumming", in which cocooning is mentioned as an ill of modern society.
But this sneering perspective overlooks the definition of classic cocooning, with its a sense of hunkering down, hanging crepe over the windows, battening down the hatches, waiting for this awful Taliban thing to blow over.
This leaves open the possibility that we may soon be grappling with concepts like "tract-home cocooning," "time-share cocooning," "split-level cocooning" and "McMansion cocooning."
These days, the 43-year-old Ms. Popcorn, who in 1969 legally changed her given name of Plotkin to Popcorn and whose middle initial is B. ("Not for butter, but Beryl"), is doing some cocooning of her own in this very unprepossessing ranch house.