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Tomorrow It Will Be Better (Dutch: Morgen gaat het beter) is a 1939 Dutch film directed by Frederic Zelnik. Cast. Lily Bouwmeester as Willy Verhulst, het schoolmeisje;
Deze jas is het duurst(e). ("This coat is (the) most expensive") Dit huis is het grootst(e). ("This house is (the) biggest.") Onze auto rijdt het hardst(e) van allemaal. ("Our car drives (the) fastest of all.") The first sentence meaning "This coat is the most expensive" has the same meaning as the first sentence further above.
De Morgen originates from a merger in 1978 [3] [4] of two socialist newspapers Vooruit (newspaper) [5] (meaning "Onwards" in English) and Volksgazet (meaning "People's Newspaper" in English). The Vooruit was founded in Ghent by Edward Anseele and appeared the first time on 31 August 1884, just before the foundation of the Belgian Labour Party ...
" Als het om de liefde gaat" reached number 3 on the Dutch Singles chart and was also released in English, French, and German versions. [4] Each participating broadcaster appointed two jury members, one below the age of 25 and the other above, who voted by giving between one and five points to each song, except that representing their own country.
"Morgen!" ("Tomorrow!") is the last in a set of four songs composed in 1894 by the German composer Richard Strauss.It is designated Opus 27, Number 4.. The text of this Lied, the German love poem "Morgen!", was written by Strauss's contemporary, John Henry Mackay, who was of partly Scottish descent but brought up in Germany.
Silvio Alberto (Tip) Marugg (1923–2006) was a Dutch-Curaçaoan writer and poet, best known for his 1988 novel De morgen loeit weer aan (translated into English as The Roar of Morning [1]). His style is best characterized as a variation on magic realism.
"Morgen ben ik rijk" (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈmɔrɣə(m) bɛn ɪk ˈrɛik]; English: "Tomorrow I'll Be Rich") is a song recorded by Dutch rapper Gers Pardoel for his debut studio album, Deze wereld is van jou.
A rare example of a work painted for the artist's own pleasure rather than for a commission, it shows a view of the Het Steen estate near Brussels, which Rubens had acquired in 1635, set in an early-morning autumn landscape. He had initially intended to create a much smaller painting focusing on the house, using three small oak planks, probably ...