+ List of countries by future GDP estimates Economists from other investment firms argue that Korea will have a GDP per capita of over $96,000 by 2050, surpassing the United States and by far the wealthiest among the G7, BRIC and N-11 economies, suggesting that wealth is more important than size for bond investors, stating that Korea’s credit rating will be rated AAA sooner than 2050.
+ Released by Atlantic Records in 1987, the album became a highlight of The System’s career, as it has been the most commercially successful album, surpassing their hugely successful debut, “Sweat”.
+ Released on June 11, 1982, by Universal Pictures, “E.T.” was an immediate blockbuster, surpassing “Star Wars” to become the highest-grossing movie of all time—a record it held for 11 years until “Jurassic Park”, another Spielberg movie, surpassed it.
+ The storm formed in mid-February, its intensity reached its peak on February 25, and had the lowest central pressure of any February tropical cyclone, surpassing Higos in 2015.
+ Hurricane Lorenzo became a second Category 5 hurricane of the season on September 29, making 2019 one of the Atlantic hurricane seasons to feature more than one Category 5 hurricane; and also, this made Lorenzo the easternmost Category 5 hurricane on record, surpassing Hurricane Hugo in 1989.
+ Running against Meg Whitman in California gubernatorial election, 20102010, Brown became the 39th Governor in 2011; on October 7, 2013, he became the longest-serving governor in California history, surpassing Earl Warren.
– Waterspouts do “not” suck up water; the water seen in the main funnel cloud is actually water droplets formed by condensation.
– Different notes are played when you blow or suck air.
– The kits suck milk for 2.0 to 2.5 months, even though the kits eat solid food after 20–25 days.
– Black holes suck things into their center because its gravity is very strong.
– The girls are quick to bring up personal appointments, but soon find themselves running from a WOOHP jet as it prepares to suck them aboard.
Some in-sentence examples of suck
Example sentences of “suck”:
– They sit on the outside of plants, stick their mouthparts inside, and suck up the plant sap.
– Sometimes it is just called a “vacuum” because it uses the force of a vacuum to suck dirt into a large roomchamber from which it can be dumped into the garbage.
– He has more friends than the others but “he doesn’t like any of them.” He often causes damage such as wiring the doorbell to a bomb, and adding a 289 CID Ford V-8 engine to the vacuum cleaner, which proceeds to suck up the carpet, the floorboards and a friend of Neil’s.
– One day, the boy begins to suck on Talia’s finger and draws out the flax splinter.
– A white hole may be formed after a black hole can no longer suck things in.
– They feed on tiny crustaceans and other zooplankton, which they suck into the end of their long tube-like nose.
– They were used to suck the blood of patients a long time ago, before we knew about germs and that losing blood is bad for health.
– A few species suck blood, and a few large ones are carnivorous.
– They then suck up the exposed blood.
– He has more friends than the others but apparently “he doesn’t like any of them.” He frequently causes havoc or damage such as wiring the doorbell to a bomb to “pep it up a bit” and adding a small car engine to the vacuum cleaner as previously it “looked a bit on the tentative side” – which then proceeds to suck up the carpet, the floorboards and a friend of Neil’s.
– They suck in their prey when they get close.
– Siphons, if they exist, come in pairs, one to suck in, one to expel.
– When black holes suck in other stars, the black hole lets out X-rays, which can be seen by telescopes.
– People usually drink smoothies from a tall glass or cup, and use a plastic drinking straw to suck it into their mouth.
– Och det var här sin suck det göt.
– After many battles all the masters start to realize that when someone loses Chen uses his staff of elements to suck their powers for a transformation spell, which is performed by Clouse.
– This comes about because, of those which suck blood, each species is adapted to a different host or group of hosts.
– Some leaf blowers can also suck leaves through a vacuum, and shred them into a bag.
– All true bugs have similar mouthparts, which they use to suck up plant sap.
– Groundskeeper: Players suck up the trash and wash the vomit that has collected in the theme parks.
- They sit on the outside of plants, stick their mouthparts inside, and suck up the plant sap.
- Sometimes it is just called a "vacuum" because it uses the force of a vacuum to suck dirt into a large roomchamber from which it can be dumped into the garbage.
- He has more friends than the others but "he doesn't like any of them." He often causes damage such as wiring the doorbell to a bomb, and adding a 289 CID Ford V-8 engine to the vacuum cleaner, which proceeds to suck up the carpet, the floorboards and a friend of Neil's.
– As a global pilot shortage grows, Pearson, David.
– Because of the shortage of water, towns were started at Milparinka and Tibooburra where there was water available.
– The 1860 cotton crop had been huge and there was no shortage of cotton either in the Northern states or in England.
– While they may not be right, as long as they are not wrong it is not like we have a shortage of available space.
– The Romans occupied the whole of the area now known as Wales, where they built Roman roads and Roman forts, mined gold at Luentinum and conducted commerce, but their interest in the area was limited because of the difficult geography and shortage of flat agricultural land.
Example uses in sentence of shortage
Example sentences of “shortage”:
- Again though, vandalism is a big deal here, and there is a shortage of admins.
- Once again, the shortage of materials needed to build the plane as well as the continuing bombing of Germany meant that not as many Me-262s were built as Germany would have liked.
- This was designed to help solve a shortage of workers after the Black Death.
– Again though, vandalism is a big deal here, and there is a shortage of admins.
– Once again, the shortage of materials needed to build the plane as well as the continuing bombing of Germany meant that not as many Me-262s were built as Germany would have liked.
– This was designed to help solve a shortage of workers after the Black Death.
– He was allowed in because they had a shortage of students.
– The Cherokee war effort had collapsed because of a shortage of gunpowder.
– Private IP addresses were created due to the shortage of publicly registered IP addresses created by the IPv4 standard.
– In February 2020, the region also saw a huge shortage of face masks and other protective gear even though China called themselves the world’s largest makers of these masks.
– There was a shortage of food during the first few years of the colony.
– The technology of the water wheel had long been known, but it was not put into widespread use until the Middle Ages when an acute shortage of labor made machines such as the water wheel cost effective.
– Food shortage has been a big problem throughout history.
– By this time, however, the German Army suffered from a manpower shortage and the force had been reduced to around 30 divisions.
– I have added 1 week from the original expiration of this RfD to allow for further comments.
– The museum initially offered a reward of $5 million for information leading to the art’s recovery, but in 2017 this was temporarily doubled to $10 million, with an expiration date set to the end of the year.
– It was ratified by only 16 states by the time of its expiration on August 22, 1985.
– Draws may occur by agreement, by stalemate, or by the expiration of a player’s time when the opponent does not possess sufficient material to cause checkmate, i.e.
– A speed-up in “The West Wing”s timeline, in part due to the expiration of many cast members’ contracts and a desire to continue the program with lower production costs, resulted in the omission of the 2004 midterm elections and an election during the seventh season.
+ This resulted in a mob which returned to the city centre.
+ His brother was convicted Boss mob boss James “Whitey” Bulger, who led the Winter Hill Gang.
+ Cleander fled to Commodus, who was at Laurentum in the house of the Quinctilii, for protection, but the mob followed him calling for his head.
+ Irish Mob boss Francis “Frank” Costello as a mole within the police force.
+ The boy ran away and came back with a large mob of angry people.
+ Commissioner Loeb dies from drinking acid in his drink and the judge that was at the mob trials is killed.
mob some ways to use
Example sentences of “mob”:
+ On March 5, 1770, an angry mob of Bostonians surrounded British soldiers.
+ Spectators can fly around the world freely, or they can look at it from the perspective of other players and mobs, meaning they can see what the player or mob sees, as if they were looking through their eyes.
+ Each mob has different things it can do.
+ The members were also in Organized Noise and Goodie Mob respectively.
+ The event happened at night when a large mob got together outside of the Custom House.
+ He was part of the Winter Hill Gang and worked with mob boss Whitey Bulger.
+ On March 5, 1770, an angry mob of Bostonians surrounded British soldiers.
+ Spectators can fly around the world freely, or they can look at it from the perspective of other players and mobs, meaning they can see what the player or mob sees, as if they were looking through their eyes.
+ At the end of June, a mob demonstrated against Cleander during a horse race in the Circus Maximus: he sent the praetorian guard to put down the disturbances, but Pertinax, who was now City Prefect of Rome, dispatched the “Vigiles Urbani” to oppose them.
+ Nicodemo Domenico “Little Nicky” Scarfo was a member of the American Mafia who eventually became the Mob BossBoss of the Philadelphia crime family after the death of Angelo Bruno and Phil Testa.
+ It is about Bob Saginowski, a bartender who becomes involved in an investigation after the mob ran bar that he works at was robbed.
+ A different photo taken by Counts of Alex Wilson, a black reporter for the Memphis Tri-State Defender being beaten by the angry mob in Little Rock the same day, was chosen as the “News Picture of the Year” for 1957 by the National Press Photographers Association.
+ According to the constitution, legislation was the matter of two organs.
+ While a major upgrade of Internet Explorer can be uninstalled in a traditional way if the user has saved the original application files for installation, the matter of uninstalling the version of the browser that has shipped with an operating system remains a controversial one.
+ On the topic of notability: the subject matter of the article does not seem notable enough to make up for its shortcomings.
+ In a 2005 interview, when asked how the movie was different from the script he had written, Whedon said, “It wasn’t a question of doing everything differently, although they changed the ending; it was mostly a matter of doing everything wrong.
+ The rest of the matter of the poster contained the motives behind the murder of the officer and warning given to the Intelligence Department and Bureaucracy.
+ Malnutrition is not, however, simply a matter of eating too little.
+ As a matter of course, the plans were rejected.
In sentence use of matter of
Example sentences of “matter of”:
+ At the core of this idea is the matter of meeting people’s needs – for a home, for a decent job, for education for their children, for good health care, and for a safe and healthy neighbourhood to live in.
+ Having lost two battles in a matter of hours, the British fled New Jersey for New York.
+ Threat of terrorist attack is a matter of concern.
+ A fancy expression for this is a matter of decorum.
+ In medieval literature, the paladins or Twelve Peers were known in the Matter of France as the retinueretainers of Charlemagne.
+ In many of these cases, it is just a simple matter of copying the pagename to the interwiki link and the page will be fine.
+ The more difficult words that have to do with the matter of the article, would still be with it.
+ At the core of this idea is the matter of meeting people's needs – for a home, for a decent job, for education for their children, for good health care, and for a safe and healthy neighbourhood to live in.
+ Having lost two battles in a matter of hours, the British fled New Jersey for New York.
+ According to this theory all the matter of the universe from stars and galaxies to atoms and subatomic particles, and even spacetime itself will be torn apart by the expansion of the universe at a certain time in the future, until distances between particles will become infinite.
+ Including or not including these troops is a matter of preference.
+ Between their compositions are the songs “Charlotte the Harlot” from the first album, “Still Life” from the album “Piece of Mind.” “Deja Vu” from the album “Somewhere in Time” “Chains of Misery” and “Judas Be My Guide” from the album “Fear of the Dark” “Brave New World”, “The Nomad” and “The Thin Line between Love and Hate” from the album “Brave New World”, “Rainmaker” and “Age of Innocence” from the album “Dance of Death” and “the Reincarnation of Benjamin Breege” from the album “A Matter of Life and Death”.
+ No admins will be CU’ed as a matter of course, or as a response to this person’s claims.
+ The precise event which signaled the transition of the Roman Republic into the Roman Empire is a matter of interpretation.
More in-sentence examples of “matter of”:
+ Their exact rank is the matter of some debate.
+ As a matter of fact, when Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams were developed in the early 1900's, astronomers did not know how to find out the temperature of a star.
+ Their exact rank is the matter of some debate.
+ As a matter of fact, when Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams were developed in the early 1900’s, astronomers did not know how to find out the temperature of a star.
+ The history of poker is a matter of some debate.
+ Lincoln chose Johnson because he had been loyal but also thought it would be good to have a Democrat on the election ticket to show it was not a matter of party politics.
+ Actions that are generally considered negative may just be a matter of comfort for this person, may indicate that the person is tired, or may result from other matters that are weighing on this person’s mind.
+ Normally when a black man was accused by a white man, the verdict would be guilty, no questions asked, in a matter of seconds.
+ The leg skeleton of “Hesperornis” was so thoroughly adapted to diving that their mode on land, and their egg-laying and parental care, is a matter of speculation.
+ She was the author of “A Matter of Freedom and Other Writings”.
+ Finding the earliest joint-stock company is a matter of definition.
+ This is a matter of dispute within the feminist movement.
+ However, since the mortar is not loaded in separate steps makes its definition as a muzzleloader a matter of opinion.
+ By 1671, the Martin family was again involved in legal proceedings dealing with the matter of Ursula North’s inheritance, most of which Ursula had left to her granddaughter, Mary Jones Winsley.
+ Keymer is situated just to the east of Hassocks and is only a matter of a few hundred yards from the boundary with East Sussex.
+ Keep because JWB works off of categories, and if they’re all in one category, I can blitz through all of them in a matter of minutes, instead of doing it manually over 3+ hours.
+ These changes were “not” just a matter of language.
+ In addition, movie theaters, convenience stores and gas stations may refuse to accept large denomination currency as a matter of policy.
+ So, let’s get back on track: this request is about whether they should continue be entrusted with powerful tools, given their very poor judgment in a matter of importance, and where after being called out for it on their Talk page, at first calmly, then with increasing alarm, there was no recognition or acknowledgement on their part of anything wrong; on the contrary, there was nonchalant assertion that it was all fine, accompanied by derails into things never at issue.
+ Ugliness can be a matter of opinion.
+ The newspaper did this as a matter of policy; it feared that the proof would be shown false like the ones before it.
+ It is more than just a matter of believing.
+ We have requests for adminship for a reason, and to give up and then request back rights in a matter of days is poor judgement in my opinion.
+ The exact scope of this clause has long been a matter of debate.
+ A note to everyone: no matter of whether you think Razorflame should become an admin, please stay civil, and remembers, there is a human at the other end of the line.
+ Before fungi were properly understood, the colour of Camembert rind was a matter of chance, most commonly blue-grey, with brown spots.
+ The scope of the subject matter of these e-books included technical manuals for hardware, manufacturing techniques and other subjects.
+ It’s not that I doubt the data or statements, it’s rather that as a matter of principle readers ought to be able to read what sources say.
+ As a matter of fact most of the tuffs found in the older rock formations contain mixtures of clay, sand, and sometimes fossil shells, which prove that they were beds spread out under water.
+ During the summit, Bush and Gorbachev would declare an end to the Cold War, although whether it was truly such is a matter of debate.
+ Provenance is essentially a matter of documentation.
+ The moral commitment usually results in action and is not a matter of passive feeling or mere recognition.
+ The latter is regarded as a Corsican dialect despite the geographic location, although this attribution is a matter of controversy.
+ This is here as a matter of common sense; look at any complete list of Bionicle toys and try to match the later names to something in another language and you’ll get nothing.
+ Whether the gardens did exist is a matter of dispute.
+ Passing in any non-empty text will produce the same result, so as a matter of style, only pass in “y”.
+ An Garda Síochána also use unmarked patrol cars in their duties and use of such vehicles is increasing becoming a matter of cost rather than the need to hide the vehicles, as the amendments to the exterior of the vehicle such as LED strobes, Tetra aerials and bumper LEDs in particular are extremely visible.
+ There are other extinct orders which have been allied with the Palaeognathae by at least one author, but their affinities are a matter of dispute: the Ambiornithiformes, the Gansuiformes, the Paleocursornithiformes, the Gobipterygidae.
+ Renames are a matter of discretion and bureaucrats may choose to disregard the guidelines where there is good reason to do so.
+ These frets can be very dense, are often very localised, and can appear and disappear in a matter of minutes.
+ However, it is more a matter of individual faith and experience than a fact of science.
+ The choice of speaker for the recent annual Presidential lecture has been a matter of interest in the press.
+ As a matter of fact, there are many Hui who know no Arabic other than words in everyday Islamic vocabulary.
+ As a matter of practice user “talk” pages are usually not deleted, barring legal threats or other grievous violations that have to be removed for legal reasons; however, exceptions to this can be and are made on occasion for good reason.
+ In this painting he shows a local meeting where one person speaks out his own, opposite opinion, while the others present give him the freedom of speech as a matter of protocol.
+ His sexual orientation was a matter of dispute during his lifetime, and since.
+ Whether it hopped on two legs or ran bipedally is still a matter of debate.
+ The date of Alban’s execution is a matter of some debate, and is generally given as “circa” 250–scholars suggest dates of 209, 254 or 304.
+ The general issue of whether the original sense of teleology applies to the natural world is still a matter of controversy between religion and science.
+ As a matter of basic science, the estimates of dimensions such as the mass of extinct animals are very rough figures.
+ The battle lowered into a matter of prestige for the two nations, and started being fought for the sake of fighting and honor, according to German command Paul Von Hindenburg.
– Dr Pepper is a soft drink similar to Coca Cola in its color.
– Pepsi is a Carbonationcarbonated cola soft drink made by PepsiCo.
– As for other activities besides singing, the Lebanese diva has agreed to be the spokesperson for the international soft drink company Coca-Cola.
– Ginger beer is a non-alcoholic soft drink flavored with ginger root.
– Coca-Cola, is a carbonated, sweetened soft drink and is the world’s best-selling drink.
– Kinnie is a carbonated soft drink from Malta.
Some example sentences of soft drink
Example sentences of “soft drink”:
– Lemon Paeroa is the name of a soft drink from New Zealand.
– It is found at home as kitchenware, soft drink cans, and cooking foil.
– Cherryade is a fizzy soft drink made from cherry juice.
– Brazil produces several brands of soft drink from guaraná extract that contain no added caffeine.
– It has ice cream in either a soft drink or in a mixture of flavored syrup and carbonated water.
– Rivella is a soft drink from Switzerland, created by Robert Barth in 1952, which is produced from milk whey, and therefore includes ingredients such as lactose, lactic acid and minerals.
– On July 20, 2007, it was announced that the Scottish Football League would be sponsored by ScotlandScottish soft drink company Irn-Bru for the next three seasons.
- Lemon Paeroa is the name of a soft drink from New Zealand.
- It is found at home as kitchenware, soft drink cans, and cooking foil.
– An example is the Israeli-owned soft drink company SodaStream.
– The Shasta soft drink company is in Hayward.
– Ginger beer is a non-alcoholic soft drink that is flavored with ginger root.
– Crush is a soft drink made by the Dr Pepper Snapple Group.
– Ginger ale is a soft drink flavored with the root of a plant known as ginger.
– Hutches have complex safety systems with redundant interlocking functions to make sure that no one is inside the hutch when the radiation is turned on.
– This starts hydration reactions, which result in long, interlocking crystals forming around the aggregates.
– In the politics of China, the Central People’s Government forms one of three interlocking branches of power, the others being the Communist Party of China and the People’s Liberation Army.
– These compartments are typically about 100-200 nanometres across and made of interlocking proteins.
– To the left is a smaller cylinder, cantilevered from a separate column, interlocking with the larger cylinder.
– It was the world’s first roller coaster to have interlocking loops.
– It has matured not only into a system of interlocking guarantees, but also into a system of indirectly trading on the actual damage done by weather, using “weather derivatives”.
+ The band’s music has elements of classic rock, blues, and Russian folk music.
+ One of the most famous is in the opening line of the famous folk song “Waltzing Matilda”.
+ The movie was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song for Burl Ives’s version of the 17th-century English folk song “Lavender Blue”.
+ He has continued to win acclaim at home and abroad for his works, many of which are quickened by the folk musicfolk traditions of Armenian music.
+ The music, based on a folk song, was written by Christina Macpherson.
In sentence examples of folk
Example sentences of “folk”:
+ Some people think he is part of the folk musicfolk revival in indie pop, but he gets ideas from many things.
+ The fifth movement, called “Finale” is a very fast movement with lots of energy and plenty of folk tunes.
+ Andersen heard the tale of the pea as a child, but it is unknown in Danish folk tradition.
+ In 2016, the folk legend was once more recreated into its theatrical form, performed by the child actors.
+ The Museum of Darkhan-Uul is the Traditional Museum of Folk Art.
+ The trombone and the Triangle triangle have hardly changed for hundreds of years, but the violin family developed from folk instruments such as fiddles and gradually replaced the viols to form the basis of the modern orchestra.
+ Many Tamil people also worship Kannagi, a folk heroine.
+ Some types of folk music are also called world music.
+ She is also worshiped in Assam, a musical folk theatre that is dedicated to her myths.
+ Among Klein’s clients were pop singers Connie Francis, Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé, RB singer Sam Cooke, folk musician Donovan, record producer Phil Spector, and rock bands Herman’s Hermits, The Animals, The Rolling Stones and The Beatles.
+ Presently, both classical and folk performing arts survive in modern Tamil society.
+ John “Johnny Appleseed” Chapman is an AmericansAmerican folk hero.
+ He is also a folk musician and television presenter.
+ The Proclaimers are a Scottish peopleScottish folk rock band.
+ They can include traditional American folk tunes, bluegrass, and other types of sounds.
+ In April 2006, Springsteen released “We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions”, a project with folk songs which were made popular by Pete Seeger.
+ Many folk songs celebrate Hall’s life and actions.
+ Candan Erçetin is a Turkish pop folk singer in Turkey.
+ Some people think he is part of the folk musicfolk revival in indie pop, but he gets ideas from many things.
+ The fifth movement, called "Finale" is a very fast movement with lots of energy and plenty of folk tunes.
+ Andersen heard the tale of the pea as a child, but it is unknown in Danish folk tradition.
More in-sentence examples of “folk”:
+ At Oxford he became more and more involved with music, especially after he met the folk song collector Cecil Sharp and composer and folk song enthusiast Ralph Vaughan Williams.
+ The bush ballad, bush song or bush poem is a style of poetry and folk music that describes the life, character and scenery of the Australian bush.
+ Rita MacNeil was a CanadiansCanadian country and folk singer.
+ We often talk about “classical music” meaning European music which is not pop music or jazz or folk music.
+ His stories use a lot of folk tales, songs, and proverbs.
+ It was assumed that he could only have picked up a French folk song while living in France.
+ He was interested in Czech folk music and he wrote down many folk songs that he heard in Moravia.
+ In 1969, Don Mclean joined folk singer Pete Seeger in the environment campaign.
+ There are many versions of the folk tale.
+ He been a member of the UK electric folk group Steeleye Span at two different times.
+ Yangdong Folk Village is a World Heritage Site as part of a pair with Hahoe Folk Village.
+ He is seen as one of the most important people in English folk music.
+ Her mother took her to hoodoo doctors and other folk healers to remove her condition.
+ Mary Chapin Carpenter is an American and Grammy Awards winning folk and country singer and songwriter.
+ They are folk religions, and combine different beliefs.
+ Jean Ritchie was an AmericansAmerican folk music singer, songwriter, and Appalachian dulcimer player.
+ Campbell Folk School, which offers weekly and weekend classes in traditional and contemporary crafts such as basketry.
+ Hahoe Folk Village also hosts Seonyu Julbul Nori.
+ Nearly every composer wrote for the violin, whether as a solo solo instrument, in chamber music, in orchestral music, folk music, and even in jazz.
+ The album is actually contemporary jazz with some country, folk music, and pop.
+ The HungaryHungarian composer Béla Bartók developed a modern style influenced by folk music from his country and other East European countries.
+ Vinje is the home of folk musician Myllarguten.
+ The name was “CB’s 313 Gallery.” CB’s Gallery was played by artists of milder sounds, such as acoustic rock, folk musicfolk, jazz or experimental music.
+ A lot of people who play folk music improvise.
+ Fuller’s Teasel was also used in folk medicine, for example against skin infections.
+ Locally, the bridge is known as “Goatman’s Bridge”, due to a legendary demonic folk legend of the same name, who is popularly believed to live in the forest surrounding the area.
+ Also his hobby is folk guitar, and he used to play live on the street in high school.
+ Although he was famous as pure folk blues artist he also played jump blues in a band.
+ Valens most notable work include recordings of “La Bamba” a Mexican folk song which became a hit in the U.S.
+ Traditional Sichuan folk music is usually played with instruments such as the bamboo flute, pan and cymbals, gong and horn.
+ Dylan’s 1997 album “Time Out of Mind” re-established this one-time folk icon as one of the preeminent of rock’s wise men, winning three Grammy Awards.
+ Campbell Folk School in Brasstown, North Carolina, and Georgia Mountain Research and Education Center near Blairsville, Georgia.
+ The tenor often had the tune, which might be a folk tune, and two voices would put quite complicated accompaniments on top.
+ Captain Tractor is a Canadian folk rock band, based in Edmonton, AlbertaEdmonton, Alberta.
+ He has introduced a severe-educated way of playing the clarinet in folk music, not deviating from any element of academic level of playing the clarinet and his approach.
+ She is a folk-blues singer who contributed to the revival of American folk music in the early 1960s and recorded the 1974 hit song “Midnight at the Oasis”.
+ He first rose to fame as a singer-songwriter of folk music in the Welsh language.
+ Their musical style is sourced to African American music and the traditional and folk music of British Americans.
+ Their leaves are sometimes used for folk medicine.
+ It was originally an ode to “Bangamata” ; the music is based on the melody of the folk song “Āmi Kōthāy Pabo Tarē”.
+ Naturally, since there was no mass media these bands were local and would only play folk music that was popular in the local region.
+ The album Mother Earth this mix of gothic rock, gothic metal, alternative rock, symphonic metal and folk metal.
+ The Fair Folk tell the group that the witches of Morva stole the cauldron.
+ The bush ballad, a country musiccountry folk song, has been called “the unofficial national anthem of Australia”.
+ Mount Hiei appeared in many folk tales in different centuries.
+ Other forms of the guitar include the metal-strung guitar played with a plectrum in folk and popular music; the cello guitar, with a violin-type bridge and tailpiece; the Hawaiian, or steel, guitar, in which the strings are stopped by the pressure of a metal bar, producing a sweet, gliding tone; and the electric guitar, in which the instrument’s sound and tone depend almost entirely on the electronic detection and amplification of its vibrating strings.
+ He originally played folk music.
+ At Oxford he became more and more involved with music, especially after he met the folk song collector Cecil Sharp and composer and folk song enthusiast Ralph Vaughan Williams.
+ The bush ballad, bush song or bush poem is a style of poetry and folk music that describes the life, character and scenery of the Australian bush.