Raymond is a male given name. It was borrowed into English from French (older French spellings were Reimund and Raimund, whereas the modern English and French spellings are identical). It originated as the Germanic Raginmund or Reginmund. "Ragin" (Old German) and "regin" (Gothic) meant "counsel." The Old High German "mund" originally meant "hand," but came to mean "protection." This etymology suggests that the name originated in the Early Middle Ages.
Despite the German and French origins of the English name, some of its early uses in English documents appear in Latinized form. As a surname, its first recorded appearance in Britain appeared in 1086, during the reign of William the Conqueror, in the Domesday Book, with a reference to Giraldus Reimundus.
The most commonly used names for baby boys based on "ragin" in 2009 were, in descending order, Raymond, Ramiro, Rayner, Rein, Reingard, Reynard, and Reynold. Its many other variants include Raiment, Raimo, Raimond, Raimondi, Raimondo, Raimund, Raimundo, Ramon, Ramón, Ramond, Ramondelli, Ramondenc, Ramondi, Ramondini, Ramondino, Ramondo, Ramondou, Ramonenc, Ramonic, Ramundi, Rayment, Raymonenc, Raymonencq, Raymont, Raymund, Redmond, Redmonds, Reim, Reimund, Reinmund, Rémon, Rémond, Remondeau, Remondon, Rémont, Reymond, Rimondi, and Rimondini.
Everybody Loves Raymond is an American television sitcom, starring Ray Romano and Patricia Heaton. It originally ran on CBS from September 13, 1996 to May 16, 2005. Many of the situations from the show are based on the real-life experiences of Romano, creator/producer Phil Rosenthal and the show's writing staff. The main characters on the show are also loosely based on Romano's and Rosenthal's real-life family members.
The show reruns in syndication on different channels such as TBS, TV Land, and in most TV markets on local stations. From 2000 to 2007, KingWorld distributed the show for off-network syndication. In 2008, CBS Television Distribution took over King World's distribution, although its logo is retained on TBS. CBS only owns American syndication rights; ancillary rights are controlled by HBO and Warner Bros. Television (WBTV distributes the series outside the US in conjunction with HBO; while HBO Home Entertainment and Warner Home Video own DVD rights worldwide).
The show revolves around the life of Italian-American Raymond Barone, a newspaper sportswriter for Newsday living with his family in Lynbrook, Long Island, New York. Whiny and flippant, Raymond does not take many things seriously, making jokes in nearly every situation, no matter how troubling or problematic, and constantly avoiding any sort of real responsibility.
Brett Eldredge (born 1986) is an American country music singer signed to Atlantic Records Nashville. He is the cousin of Terry Eldredge of The Grascals.
He was born in 1986 in Paris, Illinois. He is the son of Robin and Chris Eldredge, and has an older brother, Brice, and a cousin, Terry.
He went to school at the Paris Cooperative High School. There he played sports, such as basketball and football, and did many other activites. He starred in the muscial production of Honk!, as the Ugly duckling.
He went on to graduate from Paris High School and also earn a degree from Chicago's Elmhurst College.
Eldredge co-wrote the track "I Think I've Had Enough" for Gary Allan, who recorded it for his album Get Off on the Pain. Eldredge released his first single, "Raymond," on September 27, 2010. It debuted at number 52 on the Hot Country Songs charts dated for the week ending October 16, 2010. It peaked at number 23, followed by "It Ain't Gotta Be Love", which reached number 46.
Eldredge performed on the Grand Ole Opry for the first time on October 29, 2010.
The Nice were an English progressive rock band from the 1960s, known for their blend of rock, jazz and classical music. Their debut album, The Thoughts of Emerlist Davjack was released in 1967 to immediate acclaim. It is often considered the first progressive rock album. The Nice are also a forerunner of the much more widely known Emerson, Lake & Palmer.
The Nice consisted initially of keyboardist Keith Emerson, bassist/vocalist Lee Jackson, drummer Brian Davison, and guitarist David O'List, more commonly known as "Davy". The band took their name from Steve Marriott's slang term for being high, a term he used in the song "Here Come the Nice". Marriott originally wanted to give the name to a band he was producing, called The Little People. Andrew Loog Oldham took it upon himself to rename The Little People Apostolic Intervention, and dubbed the Emerson, Jackson, Davison, O'List group "The Nice". Emerson's autobiography Pictures of an Exhibitionist suggests that the name originated with a suggestion from P. P. Arnold. The reference to "being high" is not mentioned, instead a routine by hipster/comic Lord Buckley is quoted.
Raymond Devos (November 9, 1922, Mouscron, Belgium - June 15, 2006, Saint-Rémy-lès-Chevreuse, Yvelines, France) was a Belgian-French humorist, stand-up comedian and clown. He is best known for his sophisticated puns and surreal humour.
Devos was born in Mouscron, Belgium close to the French border. Both his parents were French and he moved to Tourcoing, France at the age of two. Seven years later, his family moved to Paris. During the Second World War he was sent, like many young men of his generation, to Germany to work. On his return to France, he took acting and mime lessons at the Étienne Ducroux school, where he met Marcel Marceau. In 1948, he was part of a burlesque trio (in the older sense of the word burlesque).
Devos' career took off in the 1950s when he began writing his own one man shows and was the opening act for Maurice Chevalier. Although his act still involved elements of his early years as a clown (such as juggling) he was mostly recognized because of his mastery of the French language. His unique brand of surreal humour and sophisticated puns garnered him much respect throughout the Francophone world. Devos is a leading character in Alejandro Jodorowsky's surrealist 1957 debut short film Les têtes interverties (a mime adaptation of Thomas Mann's 1940 play The Transposed Heads). Perhaps his best-known international appearance is a cameo in Jean-Luc Godard's Pierrot le Fou 1965 as a man sitting on a harbourside who is obsessed with the memory of a mysterious love song.
I work down at Ashberry Hills
Minimum wage, but it pays the bills
Cleaning floors and leading hymns on Sunday
Katherine Davis, room 303
Sweetest soul you ever could meet
I bring her morning coffee everyday
Chorus:
She calls me Raymond
She thinks I'm her son
Tells me get washed up for supper
before your daddy gets home
She goes on about the weather
how she can't believe it's already 1943
She calls me Raymond, and that's all right by me
She talks about clothes on the line in the summer air
Christmas morning and Thanksgiving prayer
Stories of a family that I never had
Sometimes I find myself wishing I'd been there
Chorus:
When she calls me Raymond
She thinks I'm her son
Tells me get washed up for supper
before your daddy gets home
She goes on about the weather
how she can't believe it's already 1943
She calls me Raymond, and that's all right by me
There's a small white cross in Arlington
Reads Raymond Davis '71
Until she can see his face again
I'm gonna fill in the best I can
Chorus:
When she calls me Raymond
She thinks I'm her son
Tells me get washed up for supper
before your daddy gets home
She goes on about the weather
how she can't believe it's already 1943
She calls me Raymond, and that's all right by me
Ik doe het elke dag op mijn brood,
En het is niet bruin en ook niet rood.
En ook niet zo zwart als mijn sokken.
Ik heb het natuurlijk over witte chocolade vlokken.
Oh, ik word zo blij als ik er over zing.
Ik ben in de hemel bij het genot van de pudding.
Witte chocolade pudding met frambozensaus.
Ja, voor mij is het bijna net zo heilig als de paus.
Ja het is echt een mega smaaksensatie.
En toch neem ik het met slechts per gratie.
En als ik om een uur of twaalf slapen ga,
Droom ik van een wereld van witte chocola, witte chocola, witte chocola.
In de jaren 30 werd het officieel een soort,
Dus al bijna 80 jaar dat ook wit erbij hoort.
En in '48 werd het verkocht in Amerika.
Vlak na de second world war en daar heette het toch echt de alpin white chocolade bar, white chocolade bar, white chocolade bar.
En tegenwoordig heb je zelfs al witte chocolademelk.
Dan zit er een soort blok aan een stokje,
Dus lekker roerbaar in een warme drank dat geldt voor elk.
En dan voorzichtig toe aan dat lekkere eerste slokje, lekkere eerste slokje.
Ja het is echt een mega smaaksensatie.
En toch neem ik het met slechts per gratie.
En als ik om een uur of twaalf slapen ga,
Droom ik van een wereld van witte chocola, witte chocola, witte chocola.
En in de tijd rond sint en piet.
Vergeten we de chocoladeletter niet.
Waar ik het hele jaar op heb gewacht.
Is de witte letter, waar ik altijd weer naar smacht, waar ik altijd weer naar smacht.
En tot slot heb je ook nog een witte reep chocolade.
Het ambachtelijke eind van deze witte parade.
Zo veel verschil in soorten: groot of klein.
Oh, witte chocolade, wat smaakt het toch fijn, wat smaakt het toch fijn, wat smaakt het toch fijn.
Ja het is echt een mega smaaksensatie.
En toch neem ik het met slechts per gratie.
En als ik om een uur of twaalf slapen ga,
Droom ik van een wereld van witte chocola, witte chocola, witte chocola.
Witte chocola.