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A sum of money intended to last until the next job. Stamps Dues stamps for the IWW, pasted into a Wobbly's red card, or dues book to show that the member is paid up Stamp up To pay dues, or to collect dues from an IWW member Starvation Army The Salvation Army, as referred to in the song The Preacher and the Slave Stew builder A camp cook Stiff ...
Wobbly may also refer to: Waco, Beaumont, Trinity and Sabine Railway, a defunct Texas shortline railroad nicknamed the Wobbly; Wobbly (musician)
In fact, according to the latest Corebridge Financial Life Insurance Awareness Survey, 47 percent of Americans overestimate the cost of a term life insurance policy, and another 41 percent simply ...
Whole-life cost is the total cost of ownership over the life of an asset. [1] [clarification needed] The concept is also known as life-cycle cost (LCC) or lifetime cost, [2] and is commonly referred to as "cradle to grave" or "womb to tomb" costs. Costs considered include the financial cost which is relatively simple to calculate and also the ...
The work took from May 2001 to January 2002 and cost £5 million. After a period of testing, the bridge was reopened on 22 February 2002 and, since that date, has not been subject to significant vibration. In spite of the successful cure, the "wobbly bridge" (sometimes "wibbly-wobbly" [17]) epithet remains in common usage among Londoners. [18] [19]
A wooden roly-poly toy. A roly-poly toy, roly-poly doll, round-bottomed doll, tilting doll, tumbler, wobbly man, wobble doll, or kelly is a round-bottomed toy, usually egg-shaped, that tends to right itself when pushed at an angle, and does this in seeming contradiction to how it should fall.
My life is my life is my goddamn life.” David Livingston/Getty Wendy Williams and son Kevin Hunter Jr. at her the Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony on Oct. 17, 2019 in Los Angeles
"The Popular Wobbly" is a labor song written by the Finnish-American songwriter T-Bone Slim. It is a parody of the 1917 hit "They Go Wild Simply Wild Over Me" by Joseph McCarthy and Fred Fisher. [1] [2] "The Popular Wobbly" first appeared in the 1920 edition of the Little Red Songbook published by the Industrial Workers of the World. [1]