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Bill Engvall is the comedian who coined the phrase, "Here's your sign".
The phrase "Here's to Harry" does require an apostrophe in "here's." This is because "here's" is a contraction of two different words, here and is, where the apostrophe takes the place of the missing space and the missing i from is. The "here" that "is" (being offered) to Harry in this phrase is not explicitly stated but is understood by the context to be, for example, an honoring by a "toast." Without the apostrophe, we would have heres, which is not the word meant in this phrase. (Heres is actually a legal term meaning "an heir.")
here's the thing: it just happened, alright?
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The infinitive phrase here is "to watch".
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The infinitive form of the word "cross" is "to cross."
Domandarsi su is an Italian equivalent of the English phrase "to wonder about".Specifically, the present infinitive domandare* is "to ask". The reflexive pronoun si means "oneself" in this context. The preposition su translates here as "about".The pronunciation will be "DO-man-DAR-see soo" in Italian.*The final vowel drops when a pronoun is added to the end of the present infinitive.
Here fishy, fishy, fishy! Here fish, fish, fish!
The verb in the phrase 'spring days are here' is the word 'are.'