Eldritch perhaps derives from a Middle English word meaning "fairyland," from Middle English elf, "elf" (from Old English aelf) + riche, "kingdom" (from Old English rice).
antiphony (an-TIF-uh-nee) noun
Responsive alternation between two groups, especially between singers.
[From antiphon (a song sung in alternate parts), from Middle English, from Greek antiphona.]
A couple of my friends are seriously talking about wearing latex gloves when they handle their mail at home. I feel silly telling them that they shouldn't do that - everyone's scared, the FBI's apparent failure to make any progress tracking down the culprits is frustrating, nothing they tell us seems very sincere or comforting. You do what you can. ( Collapse )
Well I was looking at a movie on the TV last night Then I had a very funny notion, yeah I really had to write a song about it And then I'm gonna sing it with my rock'n roll band And I bet the people gonna like it, yeah I know that everybody's gonna shout it
And what a dreadful mighty killer A big black wild gorilla
We do the King Kong song, won't you sing along Listen to the music and it couldn't go wrong We do the Kong Kong song, gotta sing along Can't you hear the beating of the monkey tom-tom Listen to the rhythm of the King Kong song
Now we can make the jungle out of any old place We can make gorillas out of people, yeah Well who can tell a monkey from a monkey? So people get together, gonna have a good time Everybody listen to the music, yeah 'Cause what we're gonna sing is kinda funky
So let your arms hang down And waddle all around Like a dreadful mighty killer A big black wild gorilla
We do the King Kong song, won't you sing along Listen to the music and it couldn't go wrong We do the Kong Kong song, gotta sing along Can't you hear the beating of the monkey tom-tom Listen to the rhythm of the King Kong song
Like a dreadful mighty killer A big black wild gorilla
We do the King Kong song, won't you sing along Listen to the music and it couldn't go wrong We do the Kong Kong song, gotta sing along Can't you hear the beating of the monkey tom-tom Listen to the rhythm of the King Kong song
We do the King Kong song, won't you sing along Listen to the music and it couldn't go wrong We do the Kong Kong song, gotta sing along Can't you hear the beating of the monkey tom-tom Listen to the rhythm of the King Kong song
1) Fred Schneider - Monster 2) The Doors - People Are Strange 3) David Bowie - Scary Monsters 4) Beck - Devil's Haircut 5) The Cranberries - Zombie 6) The Psycedelic Furs - The Ghost In You 7) Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Red Right Hand 8) INXS - Devil Inside 9) No Doubt - Spiderwebs 10) Radiohead - Creep 11) A Flock Of Seagulls - Nightmares 12) The Ramones - Psycho Therapy 13) Oingo Boingo - Weird Science 14) The Police - Murder By Numbers 15) Concrete Blonde - Bloodletting (The Vampire Song) 16) Billy Idol - Flesh For Fantasy 17) Squirrel Nut Zippers - Hell! 18) Talking Heads - Psycho Killer 19) The B-52's - Devil In My Car 20) U2 - October
Tired eyes weary bones active mind a little too warm walls look sticky left foot scraped skin tingle on the chin, running up left cheek hear my beloved's voice, from memory 50's girl and my queen and my little girl and a cat and a friend and a companion and a cohort red nails ghoul nails her tears on my chest her smiling lips touching mine my arms holding her close barefoot rubber lizards do our bidding
[Middle English, from Old French ambre gris : ambre, amber; see amber + gris, gray; see grisaille.]
A substance of the consistence of wax, found floating in the Indian Ocean and other parts of the tropics, and also as a morbid secretion in the intestines of the sperm whale (Physeter macrocephalus), which is believed to be in all cases its true origin. In color it is white, ash-gray, yellow, or black, and often variegated like marble. The floating masses are sometimes from sixty to two hundred and twenty-five pounds in weight. It is wholly volatilized as a white vapor at 212[deg] Fahrenheit, and is highly valued in perfumery. It is added to perfumes to slow down the rate of evaporation.