Famous Last Words - 1990 was released on: USA: 1990
Buddies - 1996 Famous Last Words 1-4 was released on: USA: 27 March 1996
Doctor Livingstone, I presume.
The number varies. IBM launched its famous "THINK!" slogan back in the 1960s, which contained precisely one word. While the shorter a slogan is, the better, slogans could stretch out to as many words as one can readily remember. John F. Kennedy's famous slogan is: Ask not what your country can do for you - ask what you can do for your country. 16 words.
V.I.P is a customer that's either paid more or a famous person in otehr words normally higher on the ''social chain'':P
Lieutenant Colonel. Always capitalized. Actually, only capitalize both words when used as part of a formal title, e.g. Lieutenant Colonel John Kurtz, US Army, or when used as a proper noun in place of an actual name, e.g. "We reported that the Captain had died to the Lieutenant Colonel" (where "Captain" and "Lieutenant Colonel" were specific people, not just generic ranks). In all other cases, the "L" should be capitalized (but the "C" should not) when it starts the beginning of a sentence. Neither should be capitalized when referring to the generic rank, e.g. "The meeting looked like a convocation of lieutenant colonels." Also, in that example, note how "lieutenant colonel" is puralized - adding an "s" to "colonel", not to "lieutenant".
Margaret A. Kurtz has written: '10,000 legal words' -- subject(s): Law, Terminology 'Secretarial dictation' -- subject(s): Dictation (Office practice)
The homophone of "colonel" is "kernel." Both words are pronounced the same way but have different meanings.
Two words: Zombie Apocalypse
A homophone of "kernel" is "colonel." Both words sound the same but have different meanings.
Isolation and life in the wilderness is the sole cause of Kurtz’s madness; in other words, there is something inherently madness-inducing about the African interior. source:http://www.shmoop.com/heart-of-darkness/madness-theme.html
benevolent
The homonym for "colonel" is "kernel." Both words are pronounced the same but have different meanings - "colonel" refers to a military rank, while "kernel" refers to the softer, usually edible part of a seed or nut.
te amo
In the conclusion of "Heart of Darkness," Marlow returns to Europe after his harrowing journey into the African Congo, where he encounters the enigmatic Kurtz. Despite Kurtz's eloquence and vision, Marlow realizes the darkness within humanity and the hypocrisy of civilization. The novella ends on a somber note as Marlow grapples with the moral ambiguity of his experiences and the disillusionment of confronting the true nature of colonialism and human depravity. He ultimately lies to Kurtz's fiancée about his last words, choosing to preserve her idealized image of Kurtz rather than reveal the grim reality.
no famous words
There is no endemic Hebrew word for Apocalypse, and no such concept in Judaism. The term that Hebrew-speakers use for the apocalypse is: Apokalipsa (אפוקליפסה), but it only refers to the Christian concept of the End of Days and is not used in joking expressions, (i.e. It's not as if it's the Apocalypse.) Here are some related words: acharit hayamim (End of Days), yom ha-din (Day of Judgement), and milchemet gog umagog (War of Gog and Magog).