Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Hee Haw" ¶ 128
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Singin and ',
Signing with MCA Records, the resulting album Good Singin ', Good Playin ' yielded little success.
* Good Singin ', Good Playin ' ( 1976 )
Good Singin ', Good Playin is the final 1970s album by Grand Funk Railroad, released by MCA Records ( MCA 2216 ) in 1976.
pt: Good Singin ', Good Playin '
Bells Are Ringing was the final musical produced by MGM's ' Freed Unit ', headed by producer Arthur Freed, which had been responsible for many of the studio's greatest successes, including Singin ' in the Rain, An American in Paris and Gigi.
Floribunda ( rose ) | Floribunda rose ' Singin ' in the Rain ', McGredy 1994

Singin and ...
In Singin ' in the Rain ( 1952 ), she is parodied as Lina Lamont ... More malignantly, Billy Wilder used Norma Talmadge as the obvious if unacknowledged source of Norma Desmond, the grotesque, predatory silent movie queen of his 1950 film Sunset Boulevard.

dancin and so
We was just tryin ' to find enough tunes to keep ' em dancin ' to not have to repeat so much.
We was just tryin ' to find enough tunes to keep ' em dancin ' to not have to repeat so much.

dancin and ...
There are several quotes not used in other episodes to include: " If you're gonna distract, Triple T's gonna attack ", " You dancin ' like you got a nay nay in our shorts ", " C ' mon Ho, you gotta make me feel the bubbles ... bloop bloop ...".

', and farewell
* ' farewell ', in some renditions, is sung " fare-thee-well ".
However, Mary finally says ' yes ', and she and Hugh bid the town farewell to begin their life together.
* Cartwright, D. 2005, ' White's nine goals earn fond farewell ', The Courier-Mail, 26 August, p. 58.
* Steele, S. 2005, ' Lions farewell a favourite ', The Sunday Mail, 28 August, p. 98.
They will embark on a national farewell tour named ' Enough Already ', which will run until mid 2011.

', and goodbye
TTFN is an initialism for a colloquial valediction, ' ta ta for now ', based on ' ta ta ', an informal ' goodbye ', approximately equivalent to ' bye bye ', ' see ya ', or ' laters '.

', and good
A good example of the contempt the first democrats felt for those who did not participate in politics can be found in the modern word ' idiot ', which finds its origins in the ancient Greek word, idiōtēs, meaning a private person, a person who is not actively interested in politics ; such characters were talked about with contempt, and the word eventually acquired its modern meaning.
The French finally acquired the islands through a cunning mixture of strategies, including the policy of ' divide and conquer ', chequebook politics and a serendipitous affair between a sultana and a French trader that was put to good use by the French, who kept control of the islands, quelling unrest and the occasional uprising.
A question of the first type might be, " What do the words ' good ', ' bad ', ' right ' and ' wrong ' mean?
This was the ' good ' king Minos, and he was held in such esteem by the Olympian gods that, after he died, he was made one of the three ' Judges of the Dead ', alongside his brother Rhadamanthys and half-brother Aeacus.
Quote: " Further, in their secret meetings they said that the Christ who was born in the earthly and visible Bethlehem and crucified at Jerusalem was ' evil ', and that Mary Magdalene was his concubine – and that she was the woman taken in adultery who is referred to in the Scriptures ; the ' good ' Christ, they said, neither ate nor drank nor assumed the true flesh and was never in this world, except spiritually in the body of Paul.
" There were a number of interchangeable terms for these practitioners, ' white ', ' good ', or ' unbinding ' witches, blessers, wizards, sorcerers, however ' cunning-man ' and ' wise-man ' were the most frequent.
Thus, from bon are derived bone, " well ", and ' bona ', ' good '.
Weight training also requires the use of ' good form ', performing the movements with the appropriate muscle group, and not transferring the weight to different body parts in order to move greater weight ( called ' cheating ').
Greatest improvement is seen in patients whose premorbid personalities were ' normal ', cyclothymic, or obsessive compulsive ; in patients with superior intelligence and good education ; in psychoses with sudden onset and a clinical picture of affective symptoms of depression or anxiety, and with behaviouristic changes such as refusal of food, overactivity, and delusional ideas of a paranoid nature.
# Therefore, Billy is ' good ', that is to say a morally good person.
They hate being told ' thank you ', as they see it as a sign of one forgetting the good deed done, and, instead, want something that will guarantee remembrance.
The word derives from the non-pejorative Greek τύραννος tyrannos, meaning ' illegitimate ruler ', although this was applicable to both good and bad leaders alike.
The bases are marked with long poles, which batters must keep in contact with and fielders must ' stump ', and only one ' good ' ball need normally be thrown before a batter must run.
If a ball is struck that would otherwise be considered ' bad ', the ball is then considered to be ' good '.
In French opéra comique, supporting roles requiring a thin voice but good acting are sometimes described as ' trial ', after the singer Antoine Trial ( 1737 – 1795 ), examples being in the operas of Ravel and in The Tales of Hoffmann.
In his Bedford speech of July 1957 he told the nation they had ' never had it so good ', but warned of the dangers of inflation, summing up the fragile prosperity of the 1950s.
The sole actual appearance of heffalumps in the books come as Pooh tries to put himself to sleep: " e tried counting Heffalumps every Heffalump that he counted was making straight for a pot of Pooh's honey ... when the five hundred and eighty-seventh Heffalumps were licking their jaws, and saying to themselves, ' Very good honey this, I don't know when I've tasted better ', Pooh could bear it no longer.
Bow remembered: " All this time I was ' running wild ', I guess, in the sense of trying to have a good time ... maybe this was a good thing, because I suppose a lot of that excitement, that joy of life, got onto the screen ".
The recent review of the PPHs conducted by the University concluded that St Benet's had a ' good sense of its place within the collegiate University ', and drew attention to the ' commitment and care ' of the Hall's academic staff.

', and luck
Oddly enough words such as ' took ' and ' look ', unlike some other accents in northern towns, revert to the type and are pronounced ' tuck ' and ' luck '.
An evil king sets out to kill a ' luck child ', the seventh son of a seventh son, whom it is prophesied will one day be king.
The king's army consisted of ' chariots, troops and beasts for riders ', soldiers and a number of war elephants, as well as a number of monks ( to advise the King ) and a relic placed in his spear for luck and blessings.
This method generates a lot of dice rolls, and gave the game the nicknames ' Dice at Sea ' and ' Yahtzee at Sea ', with critics arguing that it depended too much upon luck, and supporters countering that the high number of die rolls actually allows the luck to even out.
In one rare moment of ' luck ', Colleen's treat of a fast food hamburger comes complete with an army of sentient microscopic bacteria.
In a stroke of ' luck ', the bullet does not kill Becka, but her severe brain damage causes her to begin to hallucinate that the picture of a tuxedoed stranger on top of the TV, who calls himself the " 8-by-10 Man " ( in the original story it was a picture of Jesus ), is talking to her.
Standard German Ruß ) ( 1 ) ' soot ', ( 2 ) ' luck '

1.722 seconds.