During my concerts in the United States the audience wanted me to sing in Bhojpuri. |
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Shivering, I started to hum the song my mother used to sing to me, tears pricking my eyes. |
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He makes a living by teaching affluent housewives in Bombay how to sing devotional bhajans and ghazals. |
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New to Volume 3 are duets, allowing two crooners the option to sing along at the same time. |
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The machines are humming again, the shedhands begin to sing and some of the weariness falls away. |
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Hundreds of fans rose to their feet to sing the 1970s crooner's most famous song. |
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The new addition will certainly give the old crooner something to sing about. |
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He runs through the jungle trying frantically to lose the savage hunters as they sing their terrifying pig-hunting song. |
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After racing a wonderful atmosphere prevailed which led to an almighty sing song. |
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Proud parents came from throughout the county to hear the youngsters sing in what was the culmination of many dedicated hours of practice. |
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Behind the couples, a cupid brings new arrivals, while under the trees at right, other couples sing to the accompaniment of a recorder or oboe. |
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Top this with the freshest shavings and curls of golden Parmesan and some extra herbs, and those flavours just sing out. |
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You can sing each chorus before it arrives, and hear each middle eight before you can reach for the fast forward button. |
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Given the background music, the contestants have to identify the song and sing it. |
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James Cagney was a screen toughie, but the poor guy had to dance and sing for the Academy members to take note of him. |
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Instrumental music is a human being teaching a musical instrument to sing, to sing bel canto. |
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The time is ripe over here for a revival of the song the British Tommies liked to sing on the way to the trenches. |
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The sound of pipes joined the beat of the drum, and the men began to sing a hearty sea shanty as the ship moved through the surf and out to sea. |
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We sing for four to four-and-a-half hours, and everyone listens till the end. |
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I would love to return to Ireland one day to sing concerts of arias and Irish songs. |
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They sing a cappella, circling the pews as congregants trickle in and join the singing. |
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The first two songs use folk melodies which Durey heard a young shepherd sing during his stay. |
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Unlike most who audition with backing tracks, Harry chose to sing his a cappela, and he got a good round of applause at the end. |
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I like to speak in Tibetan, but prefer to write in English, I like to sing in Hindi but my tune and accent are all wrong. |
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Why do goats sing and what can a bee, a mouse, and an unknown furry creature have in common? |
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I also sing thumris and bhajans and they always go down well with the audience everwhere. |
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While brewing the potion, he would sing appropriate songs and blow into the mixture through a tube. |
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My mother, a Gaelic speaker, came from the area and used to sing me songs about the castle. |
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But are birds unfeeling, mechanical songsters, driven to sing but never understanding what it is they do? |
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And, since my husband won't sing to me, I don't really know that he's a basso profundo, but his voice is rather low. |
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Her discovery of religious and theosophical literature, as well as magic, gave her new subjects to sing about, too. |
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Frederik and the groomers are traditional Damara people and sing church songs and harmonic lullabies as they tend to the horses. |
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On the scumbled, thickly painted surface of Voice III is the image of a woman, mouth open as if to sing or to accept a drink. |
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Inevitably she has to sing the role rather lightly, given its high tessitura. |
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But still, the man could sing like nobody else, even if he did have a tasty little part-time job as a Mafia bagman. |
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It was very unusual for a lyric tenor to sing all those notes in full voice. |
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As a child, he would tag along with the field workers and gandy dancers and learned to sing old call-and-answer songs. |
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Even though I can't sing like the Beach Boys, I'm glad that my daughters are California girls. |
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Later, boys were paid to sing treble parts at meetings of glee clubs, and glees for SATB became more common. |
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Laurie, in her ecstatic state, executed a pirouette, and began to sing in earnest. |
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The members listen to and sing only the songs composed before 1980, a period often referred to as the golden era of Indian film music. |
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Carnatic music is scientifically organized, but folk music is not, so people who are not properly trained just sing out of emotion, enthusiasm. |
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It must have the stamina to sing with only short pauses to gather breath, and its notes must be loud and clear. |
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Instead of climbing back down to the seat with many grunts and exclamations, Philip stayed perched on the piano bench and started to sing scat. |
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Roman even has Mark sing Hebrew songs to substantiate the family's piousness. |
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Jacques told me that everyone was in such awe when I sang it, no one would sing the descant while I was at college. |
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They embrace over a tureen of soup then she pulls herself together to sing I'm Just a Dope Who is Stuck on Hope. |
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I play guitar and sing in a band called the Decemberists with Mam'selles Jenny Conlee and Rachel Blumberg. |
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Without any doubting or quiddit, he started to sing as he tackled the thing that couldn't be done, and he did it. |
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The choirmaster, Howell Price, taught me how to read music and sing with discipline. |
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He was doing some building work at a school when a music teacher heard him sing during his tea break. |
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And my grand-uncles had a gospel quartet that would sing at church and community events. |
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Barbershop singing originated in the US at the turn of the last century, when quartets would sing in real barbers' shops. |
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The very first I heard were cowboy songs, also my grandpa used to sing me old trail songs. |
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As the evening progressed, the accordion player moved on from more traditional tales of woe to sing the theme tune from Love Story in Finnish. |
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It's refreshing to hear an artist sing the pros as opposed to crying the cons of piracy on the Net. |
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As you sing the song the next time, you wave your left hand in time with the music. |
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He would have a few rums, buy everyone a drink and sing a few verses of a song if he was asked. |
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Traditionally all over Ireland wren boys and girls go out disguised with false faces and boxes to sing for the wren. |
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After their individual performances, the artistes will sing a theme song together. |
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It was a bit disconcerting to sing in front of people lolling around on cushions at first, but in the end it was great. |
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You're now feeling as if you want to sing a song, and you want to make a clap stick, a woomera, a spear, or anything. |
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As soon as I was in high school, I could sing in a special chorus in addition to having my daily choral class. |
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Whether it would guarantee her success in the big race was another matter, but nobody expects her to sing for her supper every night. |
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That Romish, Popeish man of sin The one you loathed so long You gather at his bidding And sing his birthday song. |
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The air was electric as the sell-out crowd waited in excited anticipation to hear the 64-year-old Spaniard sing favourites from Verdi and Wagner. |
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Not content with continuing to sing both old roles and new in defiance of his 62 years, Domingo is preparing to embark on another new project. |
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It's easier to write a song and sing about intense personal emotions than to talk about them. |
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They sing a discordant series of sounds that can be alternately tuneful and rasping. |
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Why would it be a discredit to her if she is savvy enough to understand when a song is a hit and decide to sing it? |
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There are certain dogs that sing whenever someone plays an accordion or a harmonica. |
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When we walked into the room, he announced that he was going to sing a song especially for Micky and me. |
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Encourage soloists or small ensembles to sing the stanzas while the congregation responds with the refrain. |
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They also should be able to sing the keynote of a tonal pattern or song presented by the teacher. |
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A group of men drink aguardiente and sing boisterously near the water's edge to the accompaniment of a battered guitar. |
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On this night a half dozen members get together to eat dinner and sing karaoke at his home. |
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But the top act is the eponymous Triplets, sister divas who sing and swing with tireless exhilaration. |
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Just because you can sing a karaoke song really well doesn't mean you should be famous. |
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We tend to sing melodies into his ears, or plink away on the piano, and he can help us realize it and embellish it. |
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We went upstairs for fish and chips and they made us sing songs for the karaoke. |
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Then he jumps to his feet and starts to sing it how he imagines it, clicking his fingers and jutting his chin out. |
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But hundreds of people gathered outside to sing hymns and pray on his behalf. |
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They sing beautifully, play their own instruments and have deep brown eyes and long eyelashes. |
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It's the sort of music you sing along to at 3 in the morning when you've drunkenly got your arm round your best mate. |
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The lyric sheets seldom included music notation, so the balladmonger would sing the lyrics to a familiar melody. |
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Pairs will sing in duets to defend territories and strengthen the pair-bond. |
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She made them sing it twice as she danced, clapped, frugged and charlestoned through the renditions. |
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How come they were so invisible to people who wanted to sing the same old song about the absence or passivity of the religious left? |
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George Clooney and some cheeky chappies escape from a '30s chain gang and sing Deep South ballads while having misadventure after misadventure. |
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Well, I'm gonna sing all the songs in Spanish, and then I'm gonna do the cha-cha-cha. |
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He may process with a Celtic cross and sing a rock version of the Agnus Dei. |
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He was trying to remember the name of a pop group so I could sing one of their songs at karaoke. |
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My nearly 2-year-old granddaughter Tiana can almost sing all the ditties and do her dances to the tunes. |
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She loses her self-respect and confidence and simply assumes the role of Marty's mannequin, posed, positioned, and paid to sing when told. |
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The budgie knew his name, address and telephone number and could sing Three Blind Mice. |
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And whilst I may or may not be asked to sing in any of them myself, I'll definitely be putting a note in my diary to go along. |
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While men might employ poetry or oratory to criticize women, women compose and sing songs about men. |
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Expect plenty of Russian folklore and myth and a chance to sing Russian Christmas song Father First. |
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Many cathedrals, including York Minster, allow girls to sing in this traditionally male-dominated arena. |
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There are a few catchy tunes for the kids to sing along with, but even these seem to be too few and far between. |
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The self-taught guitarist and prolific song writer would love the opportunity to sing one of his own compositions in Latvia in May. |
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At one point the actors begin to sing together, somewhat disjointedly in both a drinking song and a folk song. |
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Then suddenly, in a slightly hoarse and off-key voice, he sang the lullaby that Mom used to sing to me. |
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They also cook, play cards, sing songs, baby-sit and plait rope out of camel wool. |
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I want them to beat drums, pots, blow vuvuzelas and sing to create a scary atmosphere for Sundowns. |
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You will be required to sing a short song of your choice and demonstrate your acting skills on the day. |
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He'd love to form a band, impress the girls and sing pop songs in broken English. |
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The teachers also taught the pupils to sing one or two songs in a different language. |
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The four vocalists have a firm grasp on the necessary style, and sing with firmness but not with heaviness. |
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Do a bit of exercising, sing a song, read a poem, watch a sunrise or water your garden. |
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She would mention a word and I would have to sing an Elvis song with that word in it. |
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During courtship, males sing to defend their territories and attract mates. |
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Rothstein said that since most songbirds only sing, he suspects the cowbirds learned to sing before they started to dance. |
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The Norse Eddas sing of the great ash tree Yggdrasil on whose trunk the heavens spin and whose roots clutch the netherworld. |
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Sure, you already knew that Ken's funny, smart, insightful, and boyishly handsome, but did you know he can also sing and dance? |
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They could all get up and sing a song or 10, and they all knew the songs and sang along! |
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That empathy enables him to sing the most recent songs with an unblinking scrutiny that Cash casts on no one more than himself. |
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I've yet to be convinced that the technical ability to sing is, in itself, a vital or determinant aspect of what makes a pop phenomenon great. |
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The rest of the cowpunchers begin to sing to the accompaniment of a single fiddle played by an elderly man. |
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Could you just sing the tune of the hymn rather than the hundred and fifty-seven little twiddly bits? |
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The greenish yellow marsh meadow locust prefers to sing on hot, quiet forenoons from moist ditches and grassy banks. |
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I struggled to attend worship and sing in the choir at my home congregation. |
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However, around the turn of the 15th century, the practice began of having a small chorus sing polyphonically. |
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They are immediately mobbed by the group and may escape to fly away and sing again another day, but sometimes they are killed. |
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I'll cheerfully have happy conversations and sing in my cracky happy voice. |
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The three sing a wondrous trio where Claire supports the voices with some strikingly dark instrumental timbres. |
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At its meetings we'd sing hymns of praise to crazy paving and pass around postcards of shopping mall glass-sided crawler lifts. |
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A nice cream tea in the Victorian Kitchens followed, leaving just enough time to sing a few carols with the Salvation Army Band. |
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The four languages you do sing in on your albums include Malenke, Sousou, Foulah and French right? |
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Everyone adores this brilliant fractured fairy story and love to sing along and anticipate their favourite lines. |
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I'd go to town on Saturday afternoons, sit on the street corner, and I'd sing and play. |
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And once you have invoked your spirit to sing with you, they invoke those unheard notes within you which is the form of communication with other spirits. |
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Circulus, their debut album's weirdly suggestive title aside, are the kind of band who will sing about transferring actual power to actual pixies. |
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Almost every Kazak knows how to sing and play a musical instrument by ear. |
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Today I sing the praises of the female form, sexist old porker that I am. |
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All of the other prisoners are gorgeous trained dancers who sing about how they committed murders, counterfeited money, robbed banks and exacted revenge. |
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So brothers, sisters, countrymen, join me and sing with your hearts. |
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The poems of Atal Bihari Vajpayee that I picked to sing in Samvedna were written decades ago when he was still inspired by the legacy of our political forefathers. |
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His wife had snatched the child out of his arms one day as he sat on the doorstep crooning to it a song such as the mothers sing to babies in his mountains. |
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Flutists are asked to sing through their instruments, pianists are asked to whistle and moan, and instrumental scores are visually twisted into circles or cruciforms. |
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Oh it's beautiful Lots of singers, mainly sing in the Wolof language But Balanta, Balanta is from the people of tribes who sing in the Fulani language. |
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I knew I needed to take a break, to empty myself, to fulfill myself with new things, modern things, some things to talk about, things to sing about. |
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I can see the appeal perhaps when you've had a couple of glasses of wine or beer, but waking up on a Saturday morning just to sing does not seem like my idea of fun. |
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So whenever I try to sing I'm back in that no-man's land that is the bane of the pubescent boy, jumping from tenor to bass and back within a single phrase. |
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So to sing it successfully I've had to detune my guitar by one tone. |
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In this diluvian world the little church where grandmother used to sing in the choir is a source merely of unwelcome and finally fatal intrusions. |
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He would play either guitar or piano and sing his weird lyrics into cheap tape recorders, saturating friends and acquaintances with hand dubbed cassettes. |
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Many countries will be represented in this concert as the group will sing in a number of languages including Spanish, French, Estonian, German and Latin. |
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We may sing songs about the sweet by and by, preach sermons and say prayers until doomsday, and he will never concern himself about us, if we don't wake anybody up. |
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When his physician announced an unfavourable change in his condition, he expressed entire resignation, and requested his friends to sing a hymn expressive of that feeling. |
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Sometimes it's just our job to show up at a funeral and sing the funeral song, and express our joy at being alive. |
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And, no matter how beautiful the sound that a bird can make, the bird cannot sing praises to God just as man does with various words and melody. |
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In heaven, not only angels but also you will sing praises and give glory to God the Trinity. |
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It is a little piece of heaven which reaches the earth and invites everyone to sing praises for the Lord's mercies. |
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And yet, we have failed to be good caretakers of your providence, even as we sing praises in honour of creation. |
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He began, therefore, filled with wonder and joy, to sing praises to the Lord, while proposing, because of this, to embark always on the greater. |
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Christmas is a season to sing praises,3 yet in our time the reality of environmental destruction undermines the doxology of creation. |
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It seems the sure-fire way to ingratiate yourself with the people who buy singles is to sing a cover. |
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The only appeasement of our grandparents were slaves in America to sing the blues to express their suffering. |
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He came in second — he was beaten by a yodeler — but the exposure led to offers to sing on commercial radio. |
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ReprintsBut when it comes to what NATO is doing, most Arab governments sing a different tune. |
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Labels and artists, originally worried that streaming would hurt digital downloads, have started to sing a different tune. |
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That he can still sing Parsifal so well at this stage is impressive, though that heavy, low-set role suits his current voice. |
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Governments can sing from both of these hymnbooks, but banks can only act one way at any given moment. |
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They would sing in praise of royalty and trace their genealogy. |
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In another time he would have plotted with the primo uomo to sing badly and ruin one of my operas, or with others of his ilk to spread rumors about me. |
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I do not think we can just join hands, sing Kumbaya and hope that terrorism will somehow or another go away. |
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Always ready to cut a rug and grab a microphone to sing her favorite tunes such as Bill Bailey, Spanish Eyes, San Francisco. |
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In other words, the love that dare not speak its name, as Oscar Wilde phrased it, doesn't have to sing to make itself heard. |
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As they become wise to the rouse, unfurl an equal representation banner and start to sing rousing ballads of liberation. |
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They sing like drunks in a midnight choir, dance like goats on mescalin and are, frankly, pretty charmless. |
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They have been going every week for six months, because they like to sing and Friday night is karaoke night. |
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To hear Clio sing and tell her stories is to launch out on a musical journey towards a destination known to her alone but sought by all. |
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Mostly, Kim didn't want to sing the same old songs about pure love, breaking up and getting back together. |
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The baby jumps in her womb and she starts to sing a song of praise about Mary. |
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Can you sing a song of praise to Him? Can you tell Him in your prayers how wonderful He is? |
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Was I to hop up and down that they were choosing me, sing joy-oh-joy, dance the voodoo dance? |
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Recently Jake traveled with a school choral group to sing at Notre Dame Cathedral. |
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Return to the altar, genuflect on the step, and sing the versicles and oration. |
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At the same time, it calls for sensitivity and to be able to sing a long line in one breath. |
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Some now sing the praises of electoral politics. The outlook is much blurrier in Sunni territory. |
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Other New York personalities have stopped by to sing the praises of high school sports. |
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They use government advertising dollars to sing the praises of their own political platform. |
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While the supervisors and other interested parties sing the praises of this approach, its impact is difficult to assess. |
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Once there they'll hear the powerful voices of men and women griots filling the courtyards of villages as they sing the praises of Soundiatta. |
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We are not here to sing the praises of a Constitution that is not without its defects. |
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Some people outside North Korea sing the praises of the remarkable successes that have been publicised by its regime. |
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And so, as I said at the beginning, we must sing the praises of the choices which your education has given you. |
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Often there is a great fanfare as pundits sing the praises of the next revolution that will change our lives. |
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Plan a nice funeral, if you must, sing some songs, and send him off with a bouquet of winter lilies. |
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Lyona Ostricker would assume the stage and sing Russian classics and then coarsen his voice and do an imitation of a famous black jazz singer. |
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We hope that whoever wins this blasted election will be kind enough to sing his acceptance speech. |
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I still do find it a tremendously useful device to invent a character and have the character sing the song. |
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They sing in unblended unison, and their songs use strophic forms as well as complex sectional forms with many short interwoven melodic motifs. |
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Grant's starchiness, a certain reserve in her lean frame, also works well for Sarah as they sing about their ideal partners. |
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It goes back to groups like Les Thugs and Syd Matters who was one of the first French artists to sing in English about eight years ago now. |
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He became a singer by accident after getting on stage to sing at a club. |
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Birds sing peacefully, and in the evening, frogs chime in with their own songs. |
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He accompanies Steve Dugardin, who will sing French Baroque songs in his distinctive countertenor voice. |
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Harmonious and charming, her melodies sing out in English, Creole and Portuguese. |
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In the Book of Psalms the monks find the words to sing out what is in their own hearts and in the whole world. |
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Our tech team was working to find a solution when suddenly thousands voices began to sing out of the darkness. |
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To him, our victorious King, to him who is crucified and risen, we sing out with joy our Alleluia! |
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I sing out my anger and frustration, even though I love my country more than anything, and I tell my homeland how much I love it on this record. |
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Stall-holders sing out their bargains as you trawl the aisles of fresh produce, souvenirs and clothing. |
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The good people who found him were amazed to hear him sing out as soon as he entered the world and ask for a glass of pèkèt. |
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One does not systematically sing out of love, even if the repetition and the melody seem to offer an impression not compatible with self-esteem. |
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Their creative adventure started three years ago with a desire to sing out loud the things we usually keep to ourselves. |
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He's sure to sing out loud and clear that he has a guitar and a future that goes with it! |
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They aren't perfect, but it's a lot better than waiting for the balladeer to stroll by and sing us the stories of the day for his dinner. |
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The bugler plays Last Post, Reveille, we sing O Canada, people lay wreathes, and at the end, we sing God Save the Queen. |
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The audience adorn themselves in patriotic tat, such as Union Jack hats and novelty polyester ties, and sing songs about Britain's greatness whilst waving plastic flags. |
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But when you can sing like that, how can you constrain that voice and possibly be comfortable in the back? |
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Youngsters from all over Europe and beyond will gather here to sing and make music together in an atmosphere of fraternization. |
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Ever since she was a little child she loved to sing the folk songs she learned from her father, a well-known rhapsodist. |
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I don't tend to sing and dance unless I'm a little bit inebriated, so I decided to have a little stiffener before I went in to calm myself down. |
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The tomb is transformed into a table. Instead of a threnody the actors sing a military song. |
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A good three decades stand between you and the younger artists you sing with on these? |
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Naqi: My grandmother used to sing a song about a bowlegged whaler, but the whaler didn't understand her words. |
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Besides that the music is already totally primitive, you want to make me sing some schlock! |
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Be romanced by our musicians as they sing to you while the gondoliers row you through the maze of bridges and quiet residences of inner Venice. |
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Hazel started to sing the words of the song as she raised the bucket above the bassinet and poured. |
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We then started the evening with a jam session-where anyone who could play and sing showed their talent-and ended it with a tour of the houses. |
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With their colourful yarn, needlecraft and laundry basket, the three inventive tree-fairies spin and dance and sing the story of life. |
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Our souls sing the gutta-percha song, while the third spirit of rubber is smothered. |
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Mary and the Church never cease to sing the wonder of the believer when God himself comes to visit. |
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Even today, according to the circumstances, I get goose bumps when I sing that song. |
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If you could write like Shakespeare, it would be like being able to sing like Christina Aguilera. |
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Europe must sing from the same hymn sheet when it comes to economic policy. |
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She had been a singer all her life and totally lost the ability to sing a single note. |
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Yacine gets on very well with her father and is even allowed to sing on the stage at his concerts. |
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He leads his dancers in a mystic dream induced by ayahuasca vine, while musician play and sing the story. |
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Some cry as they cross onto the field, and others sing to lift their spirits and coordinate their feet. |
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We learned how to sing from the animals, and saw some enchanting portraits from the wild kingdom. |
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She is going to sing a complicated song to show off the different aspects of her voice. |
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We wanted to make the interior sing with lighting, so we absorbed ideas and moved ahead smoothly. |
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If they are also sung by children, he will easily be able to identify with them and eventually sing them himself. |
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Today I sing and dance with the children in the centre, and I will be able to train as a dancer. |
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In the convents sisters frequently envy one another in small things, but when the bell rings they all go to the chapel to sing Vespers. |
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The older is a soprano but people tend to make her sing alto. |
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After their meal they retire to their caves and cells for the rest of the day, emerging only to sing lauds, vespers and compline at the appointed times. |
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Ask him another and he begins to sing in obscure riddling rhymes. |
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Savenko has a fine presence, but in these opening acts he seemed somewhat inhibited, perhaps because of having to sing the role in English rather then his native Russian. |
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Redbirds, bluebirds, robins, bobolinks, scarlet tanagers, Kentucky warblers, and orchard orioles strut and sing like the cast of a turn-of-the-century revue. |
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Song birds in the mating season seem to sing endlessly, and some birds, such as parrots or lyre birds, can even imitate human speech almost to perfection. |
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Krystal ran her bath sponge over her body and started to sing along. |
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Ferrell still decided to sing a special theme song for the gigantic, sweaty, red-faced politician. |
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They craft melodies that mirror those experiences, swooping and soaring and begging you to sing along. |
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He would get me little gigs at bars or restaurants in Syracuse, and I would perform and sing for my meal. |
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Another intriguing fact about the original is that Sam Levene, who played Nathan, couldn't sing a lick and said so. |
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The sound of pipes joined the beat of the drum, and the men began to sing a hearty Canaanite sea shanty as the ship moved through the surf and out to sea. |
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He'd get some old sailor to sing an old sea shanty with a cracked voice. |
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Not only can we sing and dance to Bollywood numbers, Indian classical music and bhangra, but fusions of East and West are fast gaining the ascendancy. |
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I'd be forced to sing Molly Malone or something, my sister and I would have to get up and do a bit of Irish dancing and all the biddies would nod happily and sip their sherry. |
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Go back to the woods, sing country music or yodel, stop biting the hand that feeds you and leave hip-hop to the people who understand and appreciate it. |
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Every week they dress up in dinner jackets and black ties to visit old people's homes and sing old and well-loved songs to their delighted audiences. |
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The choir sing both of these in a natural and unforced manner. |
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He said that Lutherans sing in harmony because they are too modest to sing solos, while also believing that unison singing would make them too worldly. |
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Anyone wishing to sing a song or recite a poem are welcome to do so. |
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You should never sing with a very sore throat or swollen glands. |
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Daniel likes to sing little songs in awful voices to make people laugh. |
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And they sing songs by halfwits like The Eagles and Bryan Adams! |
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His stock-in-trade was to take another person's song and sing along to it. |
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Occasionally, they even sing in Welsh, but the sheer catchiness of tracks such as Ysbeidiau Heulog can still deceive you into believing you can sing along. |
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But although the film seems sometimes overfull of characters, the fine acting comes in such generous quantities that the angels will sing hallelujahs in your head. |
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That's my first road-trip memory, and the only way we survived this yearly haul, to our beach house five hours away, was with padkos and sing along songs. |
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After all, there were Anglo-Saxon pagan gods to sing about as well. |
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For once in your life, you don't have to sing for your supper. |
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The rebel leader also prays within concentric circles drawn in ash or pebbles and has a choir of young girls, some dressed as nuns, to sing his praises. |
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At the age of 75, Bergonzi was about to sing Verdi's Otello for the first time, in a concert performance with the Opera Orchestra of New York conducted by Eve Queler. |
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His voice enraptured the crowd, who were compelled to sing along. |
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It was euphonious and easy to sing and to our young ears sounded good. |
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Several diurnally active bird species call or sing at night. |
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In our area we have social events, sing songs and get-togethers and dos. |
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He makes the harp sing modally, although he continually changes the modes. |
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I sing out of joy, fear, grief and love of life. |
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With vocal sounds that either sing or groan like a didgeridoo, his emissions almost tread beyond the confines of the saxophonic existence. |
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I've never had the opportunity to sing with them, but I did once spot Mirella Freni sitting in a balcony box at the Zurich Opera while I was performing Adina in Gaetano Donizetti's opera 'L'elisir d'amore. |
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The light really exists, the mountains, the sea, the landscapes really exist with their inhabitants who work, who dream, who sing and who disenchant. |
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When the four of them go boating on the lake, they sing a hymn to springtime out of sheer, childlike high spirits and good humour, to the tune of the Blue Danube. |
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When it came time to sing the national anthems, the Canadians of course stayed silent for the Dutch anthem, but when O Canada started, and the children behind me started singing all as one... tears sprang to my eyes. |
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I certainly do not mind him speaking once in awhile, but the last thing I would really want is to hear him sing a tune here in the House of Commons. |
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After arti, devotees will jubilantly sing kirtans praising the Lord's incarnation. |
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At some places people say that they do not want low caste Hindus and Muslims to sing Kirtans. |
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Thousands of young Moroccans pressed up against the stage eager to sing and dance the night away while, standing slightly further back from the spotlights' glare, extended families looked on with evident delight. |
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Father of mercy and of all goodness, I beg You by the love You bear these souls and by the delight You take in them: bless the whole world, that all souls together may sing out the praises of Your mercy for endless ages. |
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The upper-middle-class members of the Beggar's Benison club in Scotland, founded in 1732, apparently thought nothing of arranging meetings where they could drink, sing and fondle naked women. |
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You've never actually been out to Jamaica. So why did you turn to Africa this time round, inviting Hadja Kouyaté, a female griot from Guinea, to sing on your new album over a Jamaican boggle beat? |
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He is surrounded by a court of Tritons and Indians, who praise the leaders of the colony, and then sing in chorus while trumpets sound and cannons are fired. |
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Now you can sing and shout for joy because the release is complete. |
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She herself or one of the other crofter women of the townland would sing to us the mouth music. |
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Almost every evening of the week, the weather allowed the young people to sit about a camp fire in a wonderful spirit of brotherliness to sing and participate in certain games. |
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I'm not much of a holiday merrymaker, but I do appreciate a stiff glass of eggnog while the others sing carols. |
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He reportedly could sing tolerably well and was not afraid to do so before an audience. |
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As the piece continues and the group sing in their unmistakable harmony, the bank director puts his arm around Dan's shoulders, closes his eyes and sings along voluminously. |
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It means he's going to sing his new single in between the official acts, make about a jillion dollars, and within a year or two, America's going to be in the thing. |
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A warning to watch out for spies who sing in the nude! |
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Although we are not a church choir anymore, we continue to sing festive masses at Christmas, Easter, Ascension Day, Whitsun, Assumption and All Saints. |
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We sing this to our baffled clients who can't believe that a fallen arch can cause a back spasm. |
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It felt slightly upside down that the show ended with all three sisters playing the drums, rather than roaring together in voice: the world wants to hear them sing and talk, without surcease. |
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