It is originaly a Harrow School Song, Its something like He had to go away and grow and come another year, so off he went with grim intent and did his best and grew, and when he was older he was nearly 5ft2" Left Right, Left Right, Left, Left, Oh the HSOTC is a galant sight to see As they swing along so gayly with the band With the Trumpet blowing proud and the big drum beating loud there is not another finer in the land With the trumpet blowing proud and the big drum beating loud there is not another finer in the land
Six geese a laying.
wild geese makes a hissing sound
The correct collective term for a group of crows is a "parliment of crows" whereas a common term for a group of geese would be a "gaggle of geese"
Something told the wild geese It was time to go Though the fields lay golden Something whispered snow Leaves were green and stirring Berries luster glossed But beneath warm feathers Something cautioned frost All the sagging orchards Steamed with amber spice But each wild breast stiffened At remembered ice Something told the wild geese It was time to fly Summer sun was on their wings Winter, winter, winter in their cry
gaggle of geese
That's right. A gaggle of geese.
Fly away home is about geese.
Amazon.com has them for sale .
Canada geese, white-fronted geese, emperor geese, Brant geese, lesser snow geese, Ross geese, and Aleutian geese.
Of Course! Whenever geese find it right to fly south, they must. Although not regular, they can choose to do it whenever.
Yes there was, released in 1978 It was called "The Wild Geese" and starred Richard Burton, Roger Moore and Richard Harris.
geese fact ...... geese fact ......
Geese. Look at the goose! (one goose) Look at the geese! (two geese.
geese will if you provoke them enough (meaning if you run at them you should probably run away) ducks might too but mostly geese.
A skein of geese is a group of geese IN FLIGHT
The word "geese's" is the possessive form of "geese." An example sentence using "geese's" would be: The geese's migration route takes them south for the winter.
No offense but where else would they come from!?! They have the word CANADIAN right in there name!