The battle at Lexington and Concord on April 19, 1775.
That'll be the Battle Of Lexington!
That phrase came from a poem by Longfellow
obviously hes not too famous 'cause I've never heard of him
The Battle at Lexington and Concord. Whoever fired first at Lexington was called the shot heard round the world.
Well I heard she was famouse for Marrying Paul Revere
He had seen little farming and few settelements. He had heard that these people lived in large houses and traded turquooise.
I never heard this phrase before, but obviously it must describe someone with no hair on their legs.
"U r VEH-ree hend-suhm" is a way to say the English phrase "You are very handsome!" The phrase generally may be heard said to males or masculine animals. It tends to describe a physique, not a personality. * To ask for a translation of this phrase, you must specify a foreign language in the question itself.
I've never heard the phrase "frankly charlotte", but I'd guess it's either a mishearing of, or a deliberate riff on, the famous line from the film Gone With the Wind: "Frankly, Scarlett, I don't give a damn."
The shot heard around the world.
The Shot heard around the world.
battles which marked the beginning of the American Revolution; also known as "The shot heard around the world."
A phrase is considered a cliche when youve heard it too often
never heard of them
"for several weeks" is the adverb phrase modifying the verb "heard."
no
i have heard it used, I'm not sure if it is correct but i have heard it used
CNN's most famous station ID is a five-second musical jingle with James Earl Jones' simple but classic line, "This is CNN." Jones' voice can still be heard today in updated station IDs