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Poncy and .
The Cornish Trio of the 1920s — Peter Meremblum, Berthe Poncy ( later Berthe Poncy Jacobson ), and Kola Levienne — may have been the first chamber music group resident at an American school.
* Poncy Quirino, grandson of the former President and a dance instructor.
Mark R. Henning formed Vancouver PowerPop trio Blisterene in 1995 and released the full-length CD " So I Have Them " in 1997 on the Poncy Rocket / IMD label.

bugger and me
The phrase bugger off ( bug off in American English ) means to go, or run, away ; when used as a command it means " go away " lost " or " leave me alone " and can be seen to be used in much the same type of relatively softly ' offensive ' manner.
Common usage includes " bugger me dead " and " bugger me blind ".
The little bugger that bit me

bugger and for
Beggar-My-Neighbour ( alternatively Beggar-Thy-Neighbour or Beggar-Your-Neighbour, each a bowdlerization reflecting the substitution of " beggar " for " bugger "), also known by the etymologically unrelated names Jack Daniels, Beat Jack Out of Doors, Beat Your Neighbour Out of Doors, Beat your Neighbour Out of Town, Strip Jack Naked, Picture and Draw the Well Dry, is a simple card game somewhat similar in nature to War, and has spawned a more complicated variant, Egyptian Ratscrew.
Bean later learns that Achilles has captured all of Ender's " jeesh " ( the command group that was with Ender during the final battles of the Formic Wars ) except for Bean ( whom he tried to kill ) and Ender ( who is among the first to colonize a former bugger world ).
The word may be used amongst friends in an affectionate way and is used as a vernacular noun in order to imply that one is very fond of something ( I'm a bugger for Welsh cakes ).
It can also imply a negative tendency ( He's a silly bugger for losing his keys ) He's a fool for often losing his keys.
Variations on the phrase bugger it are commonly used to imply frustration, admission of defeat or the sense that something is not worth doing, as in bugger this for a lark or bugger this for a game of soldiers.
The word ' buggery ' today also serves as a general expletive ( mild, moderate or severe depending on the context and company ), and can be used to replace the word ' bugger ' as a simple expletive or as a simile in phrases which do not actually refer literally in any sense to buggery itself, but just use the word for its informal strength of impact, e. g. Run like buggery, which is equivalent to Run like hell.
On one occasion she thought she might be sacked for saying " bugger " in front of T. S.
The name is a reference to Dylan Thomas's radio play " Under Milk Wood ", for which he created the fictitious Welsh town of Llareggub (" bugger all " spelled backwards ).
* Belfast Telegraph " Risk your life for us ... then bugger off!

bugger and .
His brother-in-law Humphrey Dakin, a " Hail fellow, well met " type, who took him to a local pub in Leeds, said that he was told by the landlord: " Don't bring that bugger in here again.
Ximénez has just enough time to say, breathlessly, " NO-body expects the Spa ... oh, bugger.
The word bugger and buggery are still commonly used in modern English as a mild exclamation, and " buggery " is also synonymous with anal sex.
The word " bugger " was derived, via the French " bougre ", from " Bulgar ", that is, " Bulgarian ", meaning the medieval Bulgarian heretical sect of the Bogomils, which spread into Western Europe and was claimed by the established church to be devoted to the practice of sodomy.
" Buggery " first appears in English in 1330, though " bugger " in a sexual sense is not recorded until 1555.
“ It ‘ s the only impersonation that people have ever actually recognised-so I ‘ m very grateful to the old bugger.
The words " bugger " and " buggery " emerged, by way of the word " bougre " in French, from " Bulgar " ( Bulgarian ), which was understood to mean the Bogomils, who were believed to be devoted to the practice of sodomy.
" Buggery " first appears in English in 1330, though " bugger " in a sexual sense is not recorded until 1555.
An often successful tactic is to pull a streamer such as a woolly bugger using clear sinking line, behind the watercraft.
* The Mexican-A sombrero-wearer with a Yorkshire accent who calls Bob a " daft bugger " in the first " Bob's Week in France " episode.
King George supposedly replied, " Oh, bugger Bognor.
It entered German as Buger meaning " peasant, blockhead " ( and went on to English as bugger ) and the French term also entered old Italian as buggero and Spanish as bujarrón, both in the meaning of " sodomite ", since it was supposed that heretics would approach sex ( just like everything else ) in an " inverse " way.
Though legal definitions have provided an artificially broad definition and dictionary's often offer cycliar definitions, i. e. a bugger is someone who commits buggery, common usage remains generally restricted to a homosexual male.
For instance, within the Anglo-Indian community in India the word " bugger " has been in use, in an affectionate manner, to address or refer to a close friend or fellow schoolmate.
In the United States it can be a rough synonym to whippersnapper as in calling a young boy a " little bugger.
As an interjection, " bugger " is sometimes used as an expletive or interjection.

owes and me
The industry of the integrated spectacle and immaterial command owes me money.
more, the industry of the integrated spectacle owes me money!
And what the industry of the integrated spectacle owes me, it is owed to the
Of earthly existence, Folly pompously states, " you'll find nothing frolic or fortunate that it owes not to me.
She calls out and David reappears, proclaiming, " the way I see it, the Navy owes me 40 years back pay.
As she leaves, Gould asks her to tell Fox that " he owes me five hundred bucks.
" Marcello later told Ragano, " When you see Jimmy ( Hoffa ), you tell him he owes me and he owes me big.
I delivered his baby and he owes me because the baby does not look like him or his wife.
* In the wake of laddism, the adolescent Noughties hero of Hard Cash, while making out with a girlfriend-to-be, finds himself " having these unreconstructed male thoughts like – she went to that party cos of me, she owes me ".
His uncle, Kélé Monson Diabaté, was considered a master griot, and Massa Makan Diabaté has said that he owes much to his uncle's teaching: " I am what Kèlè Monson wanted me to be when he initiated me into the Malinké oral tradition.

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