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Sitting Pretty is a 1948 American comedy film directed by Walter Lang from a screenplay by F. Hugh Herbert, adapted from the novel Belvedere by Gwen Davenport. [3] The film stars Robert Young , Maureen O'Hara , and Clifton Webb , about a family who hires the mysterious Lynn Belvedere to babysit their rowdy children.
Sittin' Pretty (Bobbie Gentry album), a reissue of the 1968 album Local Gentry, or the title song, 1971; Sittin' Pretty (The Pastels album) or the title song, 1989; Sitting Pretty, an album by the Academic, 2023 "Sitting Pretty", a song from the musical Cabaret, 1966 "Sittin' Pretty", a song by Florida Georgia Line from Can't Say I Ain't ...
Sitting Pretty is a 1933 American Pre-Code musical comedy film that tells the story of two aspiring but untalented songwriters played by Jack Oakie and Jack Haley.They are joined by Ginger Rogers and Thelma Todd on their trip from New York City to Hollywood to find their fortune.
The following is a list of unidentified, or formerly unidentified, sounds. All of the sound files in this article have been sped up by at least a factor of 16 to increase intelligibility by condensing them and raising the frequency from infrasound to a more audible and reproducible range.
1958: P. G. Wodehouse's 1958 novel Cocktail Time used the phrase: "I get you. If we swing it, we'll be sitting pretty, ‘in the catbird seat’." 1978: The original television series Dallas featured J.R. Ewing using this phrase quite often. 1987: Raising Arizona included John Goodman saying "you and I'll be sittin' in the fabled catbird seat."
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The horizontal axis shows frequency in Hertz. In acoustics, loudness is the subjective perception of sound pressure.More formally, it is defined as the "attribute of auditory sensation in terms of which sounds can be ordered on a scale extending from quiet to loud". [1]