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No Regrets is a book co-written by former Kiss lead guitarist Ace Frehley, Joe Layden and John Ostrosky. The book covers the period from the early days of his life, his tenure with Kiss, solo career up to today. The book also contains various pictures from Frehley's life. The design was done by Joe O'Meara.
German singer Martinique released a Disco/Synth-Pop version "No Regrets (Non, Je Ne Regrette Rien)" in 1984; Bad Boys Blue in 1989, on album The Fifth recorded an English version titled "No Regrets". The rock band Half Man Half Biscuit recorded a 1991 English version titled "No Regrets". La Toya Jackson in her 1992 Moulin Rouge revue Formidable.
"No Regrets" (Dappy song), 2011 "No Regrets" (Elisabeth Withers song), 2010 song from the same album "No Regrets" (Magic! song), 2016 "No Regrets" (Robbie Williams song), 1998 "No Regrets" (Tom Rush song), 1968, re-recorded 1974 and subsequently covered by numerous artists "No Regrets", a song by Aesop Rock, from the album Labor Days
Regret has been defined by psychologists in the late 1990s as a "negative emotion predicated on an upward, self-focused, counterfactual inference". [1] Another definition is "an aversive emotional state elicited by a discrepancy in the outcome values of chosen vs. unchosen actions".
It is given only once, and it must not be lived only to feel tortured by regrets for wasted years or to know the burning shame of a mean and petty past; so live that when dying you have a right to say: all my life, all my strength was given to the finest cause in the world – the fight for the liberation of humankind.
In general, the Old English and Norse place-names tend to be rather mundane in origin, the most common types being [personal name + settlement/farm/place] or [type of farm + farm/settlement]; most names ending in wich, ton, ham, by, thorpe, stoke/stock are of these types.
The phrase is believed to have originated with the prime minister of the United Kingdom, Benjamin Disraeli. [1] It was attributed to Disraeli by John Morley in 1903, as quoted in Morley's Life of William Ewart Gladstone with the saying originating from "Maxims for a Statesman" by Benjamin Jowett, the Master of Balliol College, Oxford, written between 1873 and 1876.
Rotten: No Irish, No Blacks, No Dogs chronicles John Lydon's childhood and youth in a family of Irish immigrants in England, as well as his musical career in the Sex Pistols and the early beginnings of his second project, the band PiL (Public Image Limited). The autobiography is organized in 23 segments, some written by John Lydon, others by ...