The entire world reacted with a kind of fury and horror when Fraser and Pinter went public with their relationship in 1975.
Antonia Fraser on Her Wild Marriage|Amanda Foreman|November 8, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Long before she met Pinter, Fraser was a glittering member of the London literati.
Antonia Fraser on Her Wild Marriage|Amanda Foreman|November 8, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Unconsciously, perhaps, Fraser reveals more about what Pinter saw in her than what she saw in him.
Antonia Fraser on Her Wild Marriage|Amanda Foreman|November 8, 2010|DAILY BEAST
The occasion was a gala dinner during which Pinter began to harangue some unfortunate guest for his political views.
Antonia Fraser on Her Wild Marriage|Amanda Foreman|November 8, 2010|DAILY BEAST
The pinter's gone too, an' that takes money outen my pocket an' puts it into the pockets of them pizen Gordons.
The Boy Trapper|Harry Castlemon
This caused a boy to yelp out, “Is the Pinter a smoking the pipe your mother?”
Somebody's Luggage|Charles Dickens
Pinter chose a spot about three panels or thirty feet along the other fence, the back fence of the cemetery, and started his hole.
Joe Wilson and His Mates|Henry Lawson
Pinter scratched his chin-feathers reflectively till the other party cooled.
Joe Wilson and His Mates|Henry Lawson
If you'll ketch the pinter fur me an' promise to say nothin' to nobody, I'll let you off this time.
The Boy Trapper|Harry Castlemon
British Dictionary definitions for Pinter
Pinter
/ (ˈpɪntə) /
noun
Harold. 1930–2008, English dramatist. His plays, such as The Caretaker (1959), The Homecoming (1964), No Man's Land (1974), Moonlight (1993), and Celebration (2000), are noted for their equivocal and halting dialogue: Nobel prize for literature 2005