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They're and followed
The pilot episode ( where it was originally called I'm Sorry, They're At It Again ) opened with Graeme Garden and Jo Kendall singing the words of " Three Blind Mice " to the tune of " Ol ' Man River " followed by Bill Oddie and Tim Brooke-Taylor performing the lyrics of " Sing a Song of Sixpence " to the melody of " These Foolish Things ".
They're on my nose now, inside of 20 miles ", followed shortly by " Master arm on " as he ordered arming of the weapons.
The last two songs played were Cream's " I Feel Free " and Pink Floyd's " Shine On You Crazy Diamond ", followed by a much-used collage of songs with the line " They're really Rockin ' in Boston ..." and station bits and ID spots used over the years, which then slowed to a halt.

They're and by
In the graveyard Johnny teases Barbra that " They're coming to get you, Barbra " and then they are violently attacked by a strange man ( Bill Hinzman ).
They're working on a new album with rap-collaborations ; one song is co-written by singer-songtranslator Jan Rot who appeared in the musical.
They're granted a new laboratory by the university ; before its dedication Marie shows off her new dress, inspiring Pierre to go get her a set of earrings to go with it.
They're still openly sold in their birthplace of Batangas, in the streets of Quiapo, souvenir shops and martial arts stores, wielded by practitioners and of course, street gangs.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s he had a string of hit records, produced by Lee Hazlewood, which were noted for their characteristically " twangy " sound, including " Rebel Rouser ", " Peter Gunn ", and " Because They're Young ".
They're the female counterparts of the Mattachine Society — and one of the convention highlights will be an address by Atty.
* 1966: They're a Weird Mob-Based on the novel by John O ' Grady
They're also known for their often-ribald live performances, which were only matched by that of James Brown and The Famous Flames in terms of musical spectacle.
They're obsessed by the size of sexual protuberances-their own as well as women's-and I'm an illusionist.
The show helped revive and maintain interest in novelty hits from the 1950s and 1960s that received scant airplay on mainstream pop or oldies radio stations, including " Alley Oop " by the Hollywood Argyles, " The Ballad of Irving " by Frank Gallop, " The Battle of Kookamonga " by Homer and Jethro, " Monster Mash " by Bobby " Boris " Pickett, " Hello Muddah, Hello Faddah ( A Letter from Camp )" by Allan Sherman, " I Want My Baby Back " by Jimmy Cross, and " They're Coming to Take Me Away, Ha-Haaa!
He collapses at a filling station clutching a Silver Shamrock jack-o '- lantern mask and is driven to the hospital by the station attendant ( Essex Smith ) all the while ranting, " They're going to kill us.
** They're Playing Our Song – Book by Neil Simon, music by Marvin Hamlisch, lyrics by Carole Bayer Sager.
He was quoted by the Wall Street Journal ( April 21, 1993 ) as saying: " They're destroying people's lives.
The Algolian Zylatburger is one such case ; as related by Ford Prefect, " They're a kind of meatburger made from the most unpleasant parts of a creature well-known for its total lack of any pleasant parts.
In the 2009 comedy In the Loop, Judy Molloy ( Gina McKee ) remarks, after seeing that most of the top positions in D. C. are staffed by young college graduates, " They're all kids in Washington.
They're generally identified by a bamboo pole sticking out the open door, adorned with ( often red ) flags, flowers, ribbons or colored plastic bags.

They're and front
They're out there in front of the Dakota late one night.
They're like jewelled self-dribbling basketballs and there are many of them and they come pounding toward you and they will stop in front of you and vibrate, but then they do a very disconcerting thing, which is they jump into your body and then they jump back out again and the whole thing is going on in a high-speed mode where you're being presented with thousands of details per second and you can't get a hold on ... and these things are saying " Don't give in to astonishment ", which is exactly what you want to do.
During an anti-war demonstration in Downtown Oakland in March 2003, Glover praised the community leaders for their anti-war efforts saying that " They're on the front lines because they are trying to make a better America ....
They're complemented by competition-grade springs, rated at 1, 036 pounds / inch in front and 538 pounds / inch in the rear.
They're quite entitled to do it, it's a free country, but it's a political front.
They're located in Angkor Thom, north-east of the Bayon, in front of Tep Pranam.

They're and .
`` They're Japs.
They're Japs '', came a high-pitched voice.
`` They're the ones we can expect to do better ''.
They're doin it now.
They're glued and screwed to the inner member of the keelson.
They're easier to shade there.
They're asking for union trouble.
They're not.
They're buying fun and adventure and family experiences.
During the return trip, Barco kept muttering to himself in meaningless phrases, such as: `` They're under sand dunes They're better off, I tell you I saved their souls ''.
They're not even food.
They're just something you're supposed to put on cereal for breakfast ''.
They're just waiting for the proper time to come over here and dump this place into the Adriatic ''.
They're all being used on offensive missions ''.
`` They're all here, back to 1865 '', Carruthers told him.
`` They're going to louse me up good.
They're up there in that freezing climate and all of us have to try and help them ''.
`` They're an expensive English shoe for walking around a lot.
`` They're looking for trouble ''.
`` They're ugly and I hate them '', the boy insisted.
" They're the kind of twisted, instantly memorable characters one meets in John Ford's westerns, Jack Kerouac's road novels, but, most of all, in the blues and country songs of the 1920s, ' 30s and ' 40s.
They're not even human.
They're cartoons.

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