It's actually "Well, raise my rent" (not your rent). It comes from Blazing Saddles, where it is uttered by Sheriff Bart.
'Galaxy Quest' (1999). this line was uttered by Alan Rickman as Sir Alexander Dane/Dr Lazarus.
"Goldimouse and the Three Cats " - [5.23 minutes into the cartoon.] see link to the cartoon .
There is no James Bond song with the chorus "your name is Bond, James Bond". The closest that comes to this is the Moby remix of the James Bond theme for Tomorrow Never Dies(1997), which opens with a sound clip of Pierce Brosnan saying "Bond, James Bond".
Actually, he never really says those exact words. He always says something like that but its never that phrase. That phrase was more of a shortened and blended form of what he said and somewhat of a trademark for the show but was never said.
The phrase "The lake danced in the moonlight" is a personification because it gives human-like qualities (dancing) to the lake.
Richard M. Nixon
A magical word or phrase uttered to bring about evil.
Yes, the phrase " the moonlight wasted itself on top of the tress " is personification. As personification is a literary device in which animals and non-living things are compared to living things and human beings.
"Thats a warp" is the phrase commonly uttered by directors worldwide throughout history to signify that they are finished, either in part or whole, their project. Whether they finish shooting scenes for the day, or have completed the movie in its entirety, they will say "thats a wrap". From this stems things like the infamous wrap party.
Neville Chamberlain, the British Prime Minister, famously uttered the phrase "peace in our time" in 1938 after signing the Munich Agreement with Adolf Hitler in a failed attempt to prevent war.
Ringo Starr. He uttered the phrase after a recording session went all day and late into the night.
This unfortunate phrase was uttered by Harold Holt in 1966.
This unfortunate phrase was uttered by Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt in 1966.
The light of the moon., Occurring during or by moonlight; characterized by moonlight.
it is a reference to the first song they danced to in the very beginning.
The words "Joe Pardon Pip" were uttered by the character Joe in the novel "Great Expectations" by Charles Dickens. This phrase is used as a playful nickname for Pip, the protagonist of the story.