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words and BBC
Mark Mardell of the BBC news reported: On the Monday the Conference was to begin, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini ( who was until last year the European commissioner for security and justice ) had told the Italian newspaper Il Giornale that Europe's failure to agree on a common approach was " a very serious mistake, because it shows our inability, despite all the words uttered in this connection, to come up with at least a lowest common denominator on a basic problem: namely the struggle against discrimination, on behalf of which we in Brussels so often speak out ".
Pepper album that was banned from playing on the BBC, supposedly because the phrase " Henry the Horse " combined two words that were individually known as slang for heroin.
Moore does not remember his words at " The Eagle Has Landed " moment, and the BBC lost all the tapes of the broadcast.
Nevertheless, the overinterpretation of the theme of the song, as well as the fact that the lyrics of the song consisted for the most part of the often-repeated word " opera " and names of well-known operas and composers, and Çetin's breaking into operatic " lay lay la ", prompted extensive derision of the song, including the usual sardonic words from BBC commentator Terry Wogan (" a nicely understated performance there ").
This idea was repeated in a submission to the BBC in 2005 that included a story of a 1941 radar lecturer in Gainsborough, Lincolnshire drawing the circuit diagram, and the words " WOT!
The song regained prominence in 1932 when the Irish lyricist Jimmy Kennedy added words and it was recorded by the then popular Henry Hall ( and his BBC Dance Orchestra ) featuring Val Rosing ( Gilbert Russell ) as lead vocalist, which went on to sell a million copies.
The first words spoken on BBC Radio 1 were "... and good morning everyone!
The New York Times wrote " Trinny Woodall, one of the upper-crusty and scathingly blunt hosts of What Not to Wear, a hugely popular fashion makeover show on the BBC, does not mince words.
In 1988 Coia became the host of the BBC gameshow Catchword, memorable for the fact that seemingly every contestant endeavoured to employ the words floccinaucinihilipilification or pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis during their efforts.
In the UK, BBC Radio 1 broadcasted the full show, live from Wembley Stadium in London on Saturday 21 July which led to controversy over the amount of swear words Madonna uttered live on air and the BBC had to issue an apology.
In the " Film Club " round of the popular long running BBC Radio 4 panel comedy I'm Sorry I Haven't A Clue, regular reference is made to this film with one or more words changed to satisfy that weeks theme of comedy film titles-usually by Graeme Garden.
According to the BBC, it " started life as a jig with Irish roots, whose first appearance seems to be in a collection published in London in 1661 entitled ' An Antidote Against Melancholy ', where it is set to the words ' There was an old man of Waltham Cross '.
It was during the production of Till Death Us Do Part that a BBC bureaucrat, according to legend, attempted to talk Speight into ameliorating his script by bargaining the number of occurrences of " damn ", " bloody " and other words held to be offensive.
The BBC also wrote that the song is " a spectacular party anthem " that " highlights 50 Cent's ability to twist his words effortlessly ".
The first words spoken on BBC Radio Lincolnshire came from Nick Brunger: " And it's a warm welcome for the first time to the programmes of BBC Radio Lincolnshire.
He has written miscellaneous songs, as well as both words and music for television, ( Watching, Split Ends for Granada TV ) and Love Songs ( BBC Radio ).
The BBC trivia show QI claimed there were 923 words spelled cie, 21 times the number of words which conform to the rule's stated exception by being written with cei.
* Where RP / BBC has the rounded LOT vowel in words containing the spellings ' f ', ' ff ', ' gh ' or ' th ' ( such as ' often ', ' off ', ' cough ', ' trough ' and ' cloth '), Norfolk may have as in the vowel of THOUGHT.
* The GOAT vowel of RP / BBC generally has a quality that can be represented as in Norfolk: thus words with the spelling ' oa ', ' oe ' and ' oCe ' such as ' boat ', ' toe ', ' code ' sound to outsiders like ' boot ', ' too ', ' cood ' respectively.
An exception is that of words spelt with ' ou ', ' ow ', ' ol ' such as ' soul ', ' know ', ' told ' which have a diphthong quite similar to the RP / BBC.
* In the speech of older Norwich residents and in rural areas, a distinction exists which is absent in RP / BBC: where the latter has the FACE vowel, the former accent has in words spelt with ' ai ' or ' ay ' such as ' rain ' and ' day ', but ( similar to ' air ') in words spelt ' aCe ' such as ' take ', ' late '.

words and correspondent
But there is a dignity and even a hint of the inspired prophet in his words to one correspondent: `` You ask what I am going to ' reply ' to Bradley.
* In a section on frequently misused words in his book The Writer's Art, James J. Kilpatrick quoted a letter from a correspondent, giving examples to illustrate the correct use of the word parameter:
At the suggestion of a correspondent, Representative Louis C. Rabaut of Michigan sponsored a resolution to add the words " under God " to the Pledge in 1953.
In other words, every message will be posted to the correspondent user, whether it is a normal message or its content is intentionally malicious.
" The Chicago Tribune correspondent Floyd Gibbons, who was at Belleau Wood, reported hearing the words in his 1918 memoir And They Thought We Wouldn't Fight, which he attributed to an unnamed gunnery sergeant ( Daly was a first sergeant at the time ).
In his own words a " camera-coolie and a roughneck ", Williams was the Geographic's first foreign correspondent, and his reports include a description of the opening of the tomb of Tutankhamen in 1923.

words and Robert
Later, with Robert Calef's observation of Mather's dealings with Margaret Rule, it became seen as the latter, with Mather perceived as drawing information from her through leading questions, and possibly having a prurient interest -- " Smutty " in Mather's wordsin his intimate dealings with afflicted young women.
According to Robert Evans, head of Paramount Pictures at the time, Coppola also did not initially want to direct the film because he feared it would glorify the Mafia and violence, and thus reflect poorly on his Sicilian and Italian heritage ; on the other hand, Evans specifically wanted an Italian-American to direct the film because his research had shown that previous films about the Mafia that were directed by non-Italians had fared dismally at the box office, and he wanted to, in his own words, " smell the spaghetti ".
In the words of Nobel Prize winner Robert E. Lucas, Jr., " For the first time in history, the living standards of the masses of ordinary people have begun to undergo sustained growth ...
In the words of Nobel Prize winner Robert E. Lucas, Jr., " For the first time in history, the living standards of the masses of ordinary people have begun to undergo sustained growth ...
In the 19th century the agnostic Robert G. Ingersoll wrote "... that all the ignorant, infamous, heartless, hideous things recorded in the ' inspired ' Pentateuch are not the words of God, but simply ' Some Mistakes of Moses '".
Mr. Pitt's case in ' 84 is the nearest analogy ; but then the people only confirmed the Sovereign's choice ; here every Conservative candidate professed himself in plain words to be Sir Robert Peel's man, and on that ground was elected.
Robert Renehan has stated that it was natural for a Roman to mix the two words that sounded the same, that Chrestianos was the original word in the Annals and not an error by a scribe.
In 1539 Robert adopted as his device an olive branch around which a serpent was twined, and a man standing under an olive-tree, with grafts from which wild branches were falling to the ground, with the words of Romans 11: 20, Noli altum sapere, sed time … (" Be not high-minded, but fear.
Robert Tannahill wrote the words in 1805 and James Barr composed the music in 1818.
The Germans fortified the island and, in the words of Robert Ensor and as Alexandra had predicted, it " became the keystone of Germany's maritime position for offence as well as for defence ".
* Journalism and ' the words of power ': Robert Fisk address to the fifth Al Jazeera annual forum on 23 May
They also engaged the work of contemporary philosophers and scientists, such as Karl Pearson, Ernst Mach, Henri Poincaré, William James and John Dewey in an attempt to move, in the words of Boas ' student Robert Lowie, from " a naively metaphysical to an epistemological stage " as a basis for revising the methods and theories of anthropology.
In the 16th century, the printer and scholar Robert Estienne ( also known as Stephanus in Latin and Stephens in English ) used it to mark differences in the words or passages between different printed versions of the Greek New Testament ( Textus Receptus ).
The numerous love letters that Robert and Elizabeth exchanged before their marriage, however, can give readers a great deal of information about this famous courtship in their own words.
In the words of political scientist Robert E. Ward: " The occupation was perhaps the single most exhaustively planned operation of massive and externally directed political change in world history.
In the words of Honorary President of the American Alpine Club, Robert H. Bates, this yeti discovery “ has apparently solved the mystery of the yeti, or at least part of it, and in so doing added to the world ’ s great wildlife preserves ” such that the shy animal that lives in trees ( and not the high snows ), and mysteries and myths of the Himalaya that it represents, can continue within a protected area nearly the size of Switzerland.
Robert Titzer, of Southeastern Louisiana University, reported on a longitudinal case study in which an infant who was exposed to an interactive video involving words was able to visually recognize more than 100 words by 12 months of age and more than 500 words by age 15 months.
Professor Robert DiYanni, in his book " Literature-Reading Fiction, Poetry, Drama and the Essay " wrote: " Rhetoricians have catalogued more than 250 different figures of speech, expressions or ways of using words in a nonliteral sense.
Robert Lees obtained a value for the " glottochronological constant " of words by considering the known changes in 13 pairs of languages using the 200 word list.
Their first album, 2000's SMPT: e ( a play on words, as both a combination of the members ' last initials, as well as a common machine time protocol used in high end recording studios ) received strong critical reviews, including " some of the best progressive rock music ever written " ( Robert Taylor in Allmusic )).
In 1736 Robert Ainsworth's Thesaurus Linguae Latinae Compendarius turned English words and expressions into " proper and classical Latin.
A further tradition has been the adoption of the toast: God Damn Bloody Magdalen !, the supposed words of the New College stroke Robert Bourne as they crossed the line.

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