Weib und Kind haben - meaning and definition. What is Weib und Kind haben
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What (who) is Weib und Kind haben - definition

VIENNESE WALTZ BY JOHANN STRAUSS II. (OP. 333)
Wein, wieb und Gesang; Wein weib und gesang; Wein, weib, und gesang; Wine, Woman and Song; Wein Weib, und Gesang
  • "Who does not Love Wine Wife & Song will be a Fool for his Lifelong!"

Gifts in kind         
DONATIONS OF GOODS AND SERVICES INSTEAD OF MONEY
Gift in kind; Giving in kind; In-kind donation
Gifts in kind, also referred to as in-kind donations, is a kind of charitable giving in which, instead of giving money to buy needed goods and services, the goods and services themselves are given. Gifts in kind are distinguished from gifts of cash or stock.
A Groovy Kind of Love         
SINGLE BY THE MINDBENDERS AND PHIL COLLINS
Groovy Kind of Love; A Groovy Kind Of Love
"A Groovy Kind of Love" is a song written by Toni Wine and Carole Bayer Sager based on a melody by the classical composer Muzio Clementi.
List of Less Than Kind episodes         
WIKIMEDIA LIST ARTICLE
User:Rainbowgoblin/List of Less Than Kind Episodes; List of Less Than Kind Episodes
Less Than Kind is a comedy-drama produced by Mark McKinney that previously aired on Citytv and currently is shown on HBO Canada. The show is set in Winnipeg, and stars Jesse Camacho as Sheldon Blecher, an overweight teenager struggling with a highly dysfunctional, but lovable, family.

Wikipedia

Wein, Weib und Gesang

Wein, Weib und Gesang (Wine, Woman, and Song), Op. 333, is a Viennese waltz by Johann Strauss II. It is a choral waltz in its original form, although it is seldom heard in this version today. It was commissioned for the Vienna Men's Choral Association's so-called Fools' Evening on 2 February 1869 with a dedication to the Association's honorary chorus-master Johann Herbeck. Its fanciful title was drawn from an old adage: "Who loves not wine, women and song remains a fool his whole life long."

The waltz's admirers include the famous opera composer Richard Wagner and Strauss' good friend Johannes Brahms. There is an arrangement for piano, harmonium and string quartet by Alban Berg.

The waltz's primary home key is in E-flat major, with its introduction interpolating with B-flat major as well as B major. The first waltz melody, with its tapping quality is quintessentially Viennese in nature. Further waltz themes alternate between lush passion and good-humored cheekiness, ending with a swirling finish in the principal home key underlined by a brass fanfare and snare drumroll, as is the usual style of concluding a piece in Strauss' works dating around that period.

The title is also a German expression for having fun.

Waltz 1