Yes, someone can.
He tends to stop when he has a short outburst to make.
You could make a short film about someone that has to make a short film so he makes a short film about making a short film.
dough
12 days is an awkwardly short time but you can make someone easily. You have to talk to them regularly to make them trust you.
The French word "santé" is pronounced as "sahn-tay," with the emphasis on the last syllable. The pronunciation is similar to saying "sahn" for the first part and "tay" for the second part.
Well first it is why did the french "come" not came, but otherwise, I am assuming that you mean why the french came to America, so, to make things short, the french came to America to find a passage to Asia, originally that is.
Think of a beat then start rhyming to it.
No. I know someone who has had asthma since he was 2 and he is very tall for his age.
No, that is rediculous...how would learning anything make you shrink?
It has to do with the French language. It also has to do with long and short vowels. The suffix et is French and ballet is a french sport. Also if you put an a at the end it would make a short a, as in apple. so it would not be the same. You can look up the suffix et at wikipedia.
Okay, here you go. At first I thought you meant what was the Cockney rhyming slang for the phrase "bins for glasses" --but that didnt make a whole mess of sense. Then I thought you meant it a different way--and I have it for you. Bins is probably short for binoculars. It isn't precisely rhyming slang at all. It's abbreviated, instead. As an aside, in the US it would be knockies, instead, and all the old ladies of the Audubon Society would blush.PS. Then I looked it up and someone else noted, in addition, that the rhyming business could be associated with the phrase "bins and receptacles" with receptacles standing in for spectacles. So I guess the choice is up to you.
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