i'll row you if you like

  • 1you know — (informal) Used as a conversation filler, marking a pause, sometimes for emphasis but often almost meaningless • • • Main Entry: ↑know * * * informal used to imply that what is being referred to is known to or understood by the listener when in… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 2Row, Row, Row Your Boat — is an English nursery rhyme, and a popular children s song/proverb, often sung as a round. It can also be an action nursery rhyme where singers sit opposite one another and row forwards and backwards with joined hands. The tune is credited to… …

    Wikipedia

  • 3Like a Prayer (chanson) — Like a Prayer Single par Madonna extrait de l’album Like a Prayer Face A Like a Prayer Face B Act of Contrition …

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  • 4Like a Rolling Stone — «Like a Rolling Stone» Sencillo de Bob Dylan del álbum Highway 61 Revisited Lado B «Gates of Eden» Grabación 15 a 16 de junio de 1965 en el Columbia Studio A, Séptima avenida número 799, Ciudad de Nueva York[1 …

    Wikipedia Español

  • 5Like Phantoms, Forever — Like Phantoms, Forever …

    Википедия

  • 6like white on rice — (USA) If you do something like white on rice, you do it very closely: When Bob found out I had front row tickets for the concert, he stuck to me like white on rice …

    The small dictionary of idiomes

  • 7You Sang to Me — Single by Marc Anthony from the album Marc Anthony …

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  • 8Row counter (hand knitting) — Clover on needle row counters from Japan, 2000 2010 A row counter for hand knitting is a tally counter for counting rows or courses worked, for counting stitch pattern repetitions, or for counting increases or decreases of the number of stitches… …

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  • 9row — I UK [rəʊ] / US [roʊ] noun [countable] Word forms row : singular row plural rows *** 1) a) a series of people or things arranged in a straight line The teacher stopped in front of a little boy in the front row. row of: a row of… …

    English dictionary

  • 10row — row1 [ rou ] noun count *** 1. ) a series of people or things arranged in a straight line: The teacher stopped in front of a little boy in the front row. row of: a row of houses/stores/chairs row upon row (=a lot of rows): She could see row upon… …

    Usage of the words and phrases in modern English