Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music called Even If and Especially When "the best of three strong albums for SST." [4] Trouser Press wrote: "Dropping the baby fat (well, some of it) without compromising the trademark garagey roar, the band hit on a sound it would gradually refine on each successive release."
"Especially for You" is a song performed by Australian recording artists Kylie Minogue and Jason Donovan from Donovan's debut album, Ten Good Reasons (1989). The song was released as his album's second single on 28 November 1988 and was written and produced by Stock Aitken Waterman (SAW).
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Minidish: A satellite dish for domestic (especially television) use; Moggie: A domestic short-haired cat; Moor: A low area prone to flooding, similar to Australian English swampland; Nettled: Irritated (especially with somebody) Nosh: A meal or spread of food; Off-licence: Australian English bottle shop/Bottle-o; Pak choi: Australian English ...
Especially for You is the first full-length album from New Jersey–based rock band The Smithereens, released in July 1986 by Enigma Records. [ 5 ] The album is notable for the hit " Blood and Roses ", which has been featured in multiple movie and TV productions.
The word so, used as an introductory particle [8] (especially when used in answer to a question), has become a common modern expletive. Oaths or profanities may be expletives, as occurs in Shakespeare: "Yes, by Saint Patrick, but there is, Horatio."
Brazil's Collective Defense Institute, a consumer rights group, has filed two lawsuits demanding 3 billion reais ($525.27 million) from the Brazilian units of TikTok, Kwai and Meta Platforms for ...
Fount was the standard British spelling for a metal type font (especially in the sense of one consignment of metal type in one style and size, e.g. "the printing company had a fount of that typeface"); lasted until the end of the metal type era and occasionally still seen. [116] From French fondre, "to cast". furore: furor