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"Dead and Gone" – Travis Garland – This version was produced in January 2009 by Nicholas "RAS" Furlong, and written and performed by boy band NLT member Travis Garland. It was released in March 2009. "Dead and Gone" – Metro Station "Dead and Gone" – Cute Is What We Aim For – Released on Punk Goes Pop 3. "Things Gotta Change" – Avery ...
Dead Euphemistic: Croak [7] To die Slang: Crossed the Jordan Died Biblical/Revivalist The deceased has entered the Promised Land (i.e. Heaven) Curtains Death Theatrical The final curtain at a dramatic performance Dead as a dodo [2] Dead Informal The 'dodo', flightless bird from the island of Mauritius hunted to extinction Dead as a doornail [1]
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Urban Dictionary is a crowdsourced English-language online dictionary for slang words and phrases. The website was founded in 1999 by Aaron Peckham. Originally, Urban Dictionary was intended as a dictionary of slang or cultural words and phrases, not typically found in standard English dictionaries, but it is now used to define any word, event, or phrase (including sexually explicit content).
Dead and Gone (EP), an EP by American rock band Stabbing Westward Dead and Gone, a band from This Is Berkeley, Not West Bay "Dead and Gone", a song by the Black Keys from the album El Camino
The video is about a man who was shot, and left for dead. The video starts off with the man receiving CPR from paramedics. The video then begins and the whole incident begins in reverse, from the man getting CPR to the man leaving his house.
"That's All She Wrote" is a song by American rapper T.I. featuring fellow American rapper Eminem.It was originally released on December 7, 2010 through Grand Hustle and Atlantic Records as a track from the former's seventh studio album No Mercy, before being released on January 11, 2011, as its eighth single.
"Bring Em Out" is a song by American rapper T.I., released as the lead single from his third studio album Urban Legend. The song, produced by Swizz Beatz, contains a vocal sample from Jay-Z's "What More Can I Say". This became T.I.'s first US top-ten single, peaking at number nine on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart. [1]