You might be thinking of Barry McGuire's "Take This Bread," but your description could probably apply to many songs.
The song "Yellow" by Coldplay has that line.
for spaces remember the word FACE for lines remember the word GBDF (green bus drives forward) thats how i remember it anyway thats for the notes inside the lines not above or below
I am sure that there are several different songs featuring that phrase, but perhaps you are thinking of "Young American" by David Bowie, which includes the lines Do you remember your President Nixon? Do you remember the bills you have to pay For even yesterday?
E, G, B, D and FA way to remember (read from the bottom up):Fudge------------------Deserves--------------Boy---------------------Good-------------------Every-------------------
He has a sister called Joanne, or something along those lines.
Something like.... Doughy! or yeast!! something along those lines!
Bread lines offered free meals to the hungry. Bread lines were common during the Great Depression, a period of mass unemployment.
Bread lines were where people lined up to get government-supplied food during the Great Depression.
A bread line is people waiting in line for food.
If you remember that the rungs of a ladder are like the latitude lines on that ladder. That's how I remember it.
The SOUP KITCHEN was a places where food is offered free to the needy. And BREAD LINES was a lines of people waiting to receive fodd provided by charitable organizations or public agencies..
they practice
bread lines
Bread Lines
Bread lines are not specifically mentioned in "To Kill a Mockingbird." The novel focuses on the themes of racism, justice, and morality in a small Southern town in the 1930s. There is no reference to bread lines in the book.
A memorial is crucial to every country or culture, to remember things in the past that are important or for people to be recognized or something along those lines...
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