the rottentrolls
It wasn't a movie I don't know if anyone said it before the mid 90s when it was popularized by the Show Martin(martin LAWRENCE)
The Australian movie which included the phrase "Tell him he's dreamin'!" was the 1997 film "The Castle". The Castle was about one family's fight against a huge airport corporation that wanted to expand its land and knock down their house, their "castle". It featured unique Australian comedy and slang, and for this reason was not well received overseas, as most foreigners did not understand the humour.
"To join the circus" is the infinitive phrase.
She says Jeepers
This phrase evolved through an interesting series of usages and references. The phrase is typically attributed to Milton's poem L'Allegro, but a somewhat similar phrase appears in Shakespeare's The Tempest. The phrase in this modern usage comes from the lyrics of the song The Sidewalks of New York.
adjective phrase describing the noun that follows it.
Hamlet Act 3 Scene 1
I have a dream
Daniel Grulke
Steve Martin
The phrase "Martin Luther King Day" is correctly capitalized. Martin Luther King is a name so is automatically capitalized. Since it is a specific day, a holiday to be exact, day is also capitalized.
MARTIN LUTHER KING it's the same sorry no learning a new phrase today
"Martin's" is an English equivalent of the Italian phrase di Martino. The masculine singular prepositional phrase translates literally as "of Martin." The pronunciation will be "dee mar-TEE-no" in Pisan Italian.
The German phrase Elfen Lied mean elfen song which is featured in the Japanese Manga series of the same title. The series are illustrated and written by Lynn Okamoto.
The sing "Again" by flyleaf is featured on their album Memento Mori (2009)--a latin phrase meaning Be Mindful of Death.
This phrase is associated with a famous speech given by Martin Luther King Jr.
Yes, that is a noun phrase, any word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun that can function in a sentence as a subject, object or prepositional object; it can be one word or many words. Your noun phrase is based on the proper noun 'Frank Martin' and can serve as the subject or the object of a sentence.