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Wilbury and was
The " Wilburys " joke was extended further, with the band members credited under various pseudonyms and pretending to be half-brothers – sons of a fictional Charles Truscott Wilbury, Sr.
Keltner, the session drummer and percussionist, was not listed as a Wilbury in Volume 1 or Volume 3.
3 was dedicated in memory of Lefty Wilbury.
It is notable for being the only studio album not represented on Petty's 1993 Greatest Hits album, even though the single " Jammin ' Me " ( co-written with fellow Traveling Wilbury Bob Dylan ) was # 1 on the Mainstream Rock Tracks for four weeks.

Wilbury and Harrison
The Traveling Wilburys also appeared in a number of projects outside of their two albums ; Harrison appeared as Nelson Wilbury on Warner Bros. Records 1988 " holiday promo album " Winter Warnerland, which also included Paul Reubens as " Pee Wee Wilbury.
*" Nelson Wilbury " – George Harrison
*" Spike Wilbury " – George Harrison
*" Ayrton Wilbury " – Dhani Harrison
Overdubs to the bonus tracks " Maxine " and " Like a Ship " credit " Ayrton Wilbury ", a pseudonym for Dhani Harrison.
As the dynamics within the band had shifted with Orbison's passing, the four remaining members all adopted new Wilbury pseudonyms: Spike ( George Harrison ), Clayton ( Jeff Lynne ), Muddy ( Tom Petty ) and Boo ( Bob Dylan ).
Although there has since been speculation about further Wilbury releases, Harrison's 2001 death is considered to have ended any possible future projects with Harrison having been the unofficial leader of the group and with his estate owning the rights to both albums.
* Spike Wilbury ( George Harrison ) – acoustic & electric guitars, mandolin, sitar, lead & backing vocals

Wilbury and Jeff
*" Otis Wilbury "Jeff Lynne
*" Clayton Wilbury "Jeff Lynne
* Clayton Wilbury ( Jeff Lynne ) – acoustic guitar, bass, keyboards, lead & backing vocals

Wilbury and .
They gave themselves stage names ; Orbison chose his from his musical hero, calling himself " Lefty Wilbury " after Lefty Frizzell.
*" Charlie T. Wilbury, Jr " – Tom Petty
He has also performed under the pseudonyms of Charlie T. Wilbury, Jr. and Muddy Wilbury.
* From North Hertfordshire: Arbury, Baldock East, Baldock Town, Ermine, Letchworth East, Letchworth Grange, Letchworth South East, Letchworth South West, Letchworth Wilbury, Royston Heath, Royston Meridian, Royston Palace, and Weston and Sandon.
The order of the Blessed Wilbury vowed to protect travelers to the land from the dangers such as the vampire Dracula.

was and slang
In 19th century American slang to bach was used as a verb meaning " to live as an unmarried man ".
The term " Bolshie " later became a slang term for anyone who was rebellious, aggressive or truculent.
" Cake " was taken to mean someone who was vain and not particularly " manly ," whereas a " lulu " in baseball slang of the period was " an unskilled player ".
To ensure that Cromwell's character used current slang, DeMille asked Horace Hahn to read the script and comment ( at the time, Hahn was senior class president at Los Angeles High School ).
It remains a matter of speculation whether rhyming slang was a linguistic accident, a game, or a cryptolect developed intentionally to confuse non-locals.
In The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin, a comic twist was added to rhyming slang by way of spurious and fabricated examples which a young man had laboriously to explain to his father ( e. g. ' dustbins ' meaning ' children ', as in ' dustbin lids ' = ' kids '; ' Teds ' being ' Ted Heath ' and thus ' teeth '; and even ' Chitty Chitty ' being ' Chitty Chitty Bang Bang ', and thus ' rhyming slang '...).
The 1967 Kinks song " Harry Rag " was based on the usage of the name Harry Wragg as rhyming slang for " fag " ( i. e. a cigarette ).
For instance, the rat seen in the cellar was nicknamed " Señor Cojones " by the crew (" cojones " is Spanish slang for " testicles ").
" Cardoso claimed that " gonzo " was South Boston Irish slang describing the last man standing after an all-night drinking marathon.
" Much of the TMRC's jargon was later imported into early computing culture, because the club started using a DEC PDP-1 and applied its local model railroad slang in this computing context.
His " nunnery " remarks to Ophelia are an example of a cruel double meaning as nunnery was Elizabethan slang for brothel.
Although the term was also military slang for vehicles that were untried or untested, this exposure caused all other jeep references to fade, leaving the 4x4 with the name.
First, kluge " was common Navy slang in the WWII era for any piece of electronics that worked well on shore but consistently failed at sea ".
In Helsinki slang, the post-1963 new markka was known as huge ( from Swedish hundra " hundred ").
Another seemingly fitting explanation is that the term was derived from the UK English slang " the dog's bollocks " or " the mutt's nuts ", meaning " the absolute best ".
An entire lexicon of slang jargon and euphemism developed to allow performers to communicate without outsiders ' knowledge of what was being said.
Another explanation is that the word " hoagie " arose in the late 19th-early 20th century, among the Italian community in South Philadelphia, when " on the hoke " was a slang used to describe a destitute person.
* That it derives from the late 19th-century French slang use of the word sabot to describe an unskilled worker, so called due to their wooden clogs or sabots ; sabotage was used to describe the poor quality work which such workers turned out.
With a goofy grin, the Kid habitually spoke in a ragged, peculiar slang, which was printed on his shirt, a device meant to lampoon advertising billboards.
< sup > 1 </ sup > The term " sou ", now obscure, was at the time common slang for a low-denomination coin.
Another spin-off was " Roger's Profanisaurus ", a thesaurus of ( often freshly coined ) rude words, phrases and sexual slang submitted by readers.

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