It's about the death of a racehorse at Kingston Race Track, giving a commentary on the race, naming the other runners and ending by saying that the singer has lost his money on the horse ("all me money gone a hell").
He shot his baby (gf) with heroin and killed killed her by accident
I read in one book when I was yonger. I have now forgot the name of it. Abe Lincoln only lived for a few hours after he was shot.
Dr. Carl Weiss apparently had some unknown antagonism against Long for his control over the Louisiana state government. Weiss shot Long twice while they were in the corridors of the state capitol, on August 8, 1935. Weiss was killed by Long's bodyguards and Long died two days later.
"Long Line Of Losers" By Kevin Fowler
...do you mean shot down over the former Soviet Union? That pilot's name was FrancisGary Powers.
It means that you threw or shot something and hit a bucket.Do you perhaps mean KICK the bucket? To "kick the bucket" is an idiom that means to die.
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i think you need to be more specific but .....in soccer when you get a pk (penalty kick) that's kind of like a bonus shot.
For the best Kick Pool Shot, first plan the cushion you will bounce from to kick the pool shot right atop the object ball.
Yes, a penalty kick counts as a shot on goal in soccer.
Bucket, a common term reffered to as the basket. ie, and he goes up for the bucket, shot is in, shot is good!
Glasses. no glasses. i just shot someone. icecream. socks. pickle jar. high kick. eggs and ham. :) Get it.
No, the bucket will not bust if you shoot a gun into a bucket of water. Water is a dense material that absorbs the impact of a bullet, preventing the bucket from breaking. However, the force of the shot may cause the water to splash out of the bucket.
There is no literal idiom -- an idiom is a phrase that seems to mean one thing but actually means something else. The word "literal" means to take the words exactly as they seem to be.An idiom is a phrase particular to a language that is accepted for its figurative meaning, as in "That amazing shot blew me away." Everyone understands that this person means he was amazed. A literal idiom would be the usually humorous thing that happens when you take the idiom for its word for word, not accepted, meaning. That would mean that somehow the amazing shot actually created the air mass necessary to blow this guy away.
No
Shot from a long distance with a high powered rifle.
The goal kick will need to be retaken.