- published: 06 Mar 2017
- views: 4468
Share may refer to:
'Computing
In slang, "old school" or "old skool" can refer to anything that is from an earlier era or anything that may be considered "old-fashioned". The term is commonly used to suggest a high regard for something that has been shown to have lasting value or quality.
It may refer to:
"The Mother We Share" is a song and the debut single by Scottish synthpop band Chvrches from their debut studio album, The Bones of What You Believe (2013). The song was re-released exclusively in the United Kingdom on 16 September 2013 by Virgin Records. The re-release peaked within the top 40 of the UK Singles Chart, reaching number 38 in September 2013.
The song was featured as the iTunes US Single of the Week for the week of 24 September to 1 October 2013.
The song was featured One Day in Dundee for UK City of Culture 2017 Bid Video on 15 November 2013 by We Dundee on YouTube.
The song was featured in the opening video for the 2014 Commonwealth Games Opening Ceremony in Glasgow, Scotland, on 23 July 2014.
Michael Cragg of The Guardian gave the song a positive review, while noting the mood differences between the song and a previous Chvrches track, "Lies". He wrote that the song "tempers the monster synth riffs in favour of twinkling keyboards, padded drum claps and a central lyric that lends the whole thing a slightly melancholic edge."
The Mother may refer to:
Lena Dunham (/ˈlinə ˈdʌnəm/ LEE-nə DUN-um; born May 13, 1986) is an American actress, writer, producer, and director. She is best known as the creator, writer and star of the HBO series Girls (2012–present).
Dunham was born in New York City. Her father, Carroll Dunham, is a painter, and her mother, Laurie Simmons, is an artist and photographer, and a member of the Pictures group, known for her use of dolls and doll-house furniture in her photographs of setup interior scenes. Her father is Protestant and her mother is Jewish; Dunham has described herself as feeling "very culturally Jewish, although that's the biggest cliché for a Jewish woman to say”.
She has a younger sister, Grace, a 2014 graduate of Brown University, who appeared in Dunham's first film, Creative Nonfiction, and starred in her second film, Tiny Furniture. The sisters were raised in Brooklyn, New York and spent summers in Salisbury, Connecticut.
Dunham attended Saint Ann's School in Brooklyn, where she met Tiny Furniture actress and future Girls co-star Jemima Kirke. She attended The New School for a year before transferring to Oberlin College, where she graduated in 2008 with a degree in creative writing.
Cookie: Me got some something that you want
You got some something that me want
Put both somethings together and share
Ernie: I'll take my something that you like
You take your something that I like
Then put both things together and share
Both: One for all, all for one
Sharing every everything and having a ball
Ernie: Maybe one something is little
Maybe one something is bigger
Cookie: But hey! What else can me figure to do
Both: But to share my every somethings with you
Both: All for one, one for all
Sharing every everything and having a ball
Cookie: Me got more something than you got
You got more something that me got
Both: So what? We're sharing them all equally
Cookie: Because the best thing we got to share
Ernie: The best thing we got to share
Both: Yeah, the best thing we got to share's you and me
Ernie: You and me
Cookie: You and me
Ernie: Me and you
Cookie: Both of us
Ernie: Ernie and Cookie Monster
Cookie: Cookie Monster and Ernie and Cookie Monster
Ernie: And Ernie too
Cookie: Oh, me love this song