It doesn't seem to make sense. There is a common phrase "pay the piper" which means you should do what you said you would do, or there will be consequences (based on the story of the pied piper, who lured the children away when the town wouldn't pay him for getting rid of the rats), but I have never heard the lesson stated quite that way. ***** The correct sayings is: He who pays the piper calls the tune.
If you are paying for something, you are in control of it. If I am paying for the movie tickets, I get to decide which movie.
the service manual calls for a tuneup every 75,000 miles.
secret na malupet....:-) Who ever will pay the producer will control production. He who pays the piper calls the tune.
Yes. If you tune to the correct frequencies you can monitor satellites and space missions. We still have not gotten any calls from aliens.
The word tune is a noun (tune, tunes) and a verb (tune, tunes, tuning, tuned)."Tune" is a noun as a word for a melody or a song (as in "sing a tune"). It is a verb as a word for adjusting the strings on a musical instrument (as in "tune" a piano.)
tune crafters craft your tune to a nice brown then you just take your tune and give it to a mexican gorilla
A tune is music.
You get a hip-hop tune, then get a house tune, and play them both at the same time.
basically get the tune down if you have the tune down your good
what is the prefix of misfortune
just a phrase or tune which is then repeated. Call and echo - Repeating the tune which was played Call and response - After the tune, a different tune plays in response to the first tune.