you haven't missed much - meaning and definition. What is you haven't missed much
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What (who) is you haven't missed much - definition

SINGLE
You Haven't Done Nothing

Much Ado About Nothing         
  • Robert Smirke]] (n.d.)
  • ''Beatrice, Hero and Ursula'', John Jones, after [[Henry Fuseli]] (c. 1771)
  • John Sutcliffe]]: Beatrice overhears Hero and Ursula.
  • fr}}, 1770
  • [[John Gielgud]] and [[Margaret Leighton]] in the 1959 Broadway production of ''Much Ado About Nothing''
  • ''Hero'', [[John William Wright]] (c.1849)
  • Print of [[Ellen Terry]] as Beatrice and [[Henry Irving]] as Benedick in an 1887 performance of the play
  • [[John Gielgud]] as Benedick in a 1959 production
  • Drawing of [[Herbert Beerbohm Tree]] as Benedick and [[Winifred Emery]] as Beatrice in a 1905 production. Act II, Scene v: "Kill Claudio".
  • Swooning of Hero in the Church scene by [[Alfred Elmore]]
COMEDY PLAY BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Much Ado about Nothing; Conrade; Borachio; Benedick; Much adoe about nothing; MAAN; Governor Leonato; Much Adoe About Nothing; Much ado about nothing; Much Ado About Nothing (title); Bendick and Beatrice
Much Ado About Nothing is a comedy by William Shakespeare thought to have been written in 1598 and 1599.See textual notes to Much Ado About Nothing in The Norton Shakespeare (W.
benedick         
  • Robert Smirke]] (n.d.)
  • ''Beatrice, Hero and Ursula'', John Jones, after [[Henry Fuseli]] (c. 1771)
  • John Sutcliffe]]: Beatrice overhears Hero and Ursula.
  • fr}}, 1770
  • [[John Gielgud]] and [[Margaret Leighton]] in the 1959 Broadway production of ''Much Ado About Nothing''
  • ''Hero'', [[John William Wright]] (c.1849)
  • Print of [[Ellen Terry]] as Beatrice and [[Henry Irving]] as Benedick in an 1887 performance of the play
  • [[John Gielgud]] as Benedick in a 1959 production
  • Drawing of [[Herbert Beerbohm Tree]] as Benedick and [[Winifred Emery]] as Beatrice in a 1905 production. Act II, Scene v: "Kill Claudio".
  • Swooning of Hero in the Church scene by [[Alfred Elmore]]
COMEDY PLAY BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Much Ado about Nothing; Conrade; Borachio; Benedick; Much adoe about nothing; MAAN; Governor Leonato; Much Adoe About Nothing; Much ado about nothing; Much Ado About Nothing (title); Bendick and Beatrice
n.; (also benedict)
Newly married man, neogamist.
Benedick         
  • Robert Smirke]] (n.d.)
  • ''Beatrice, Hero and Ursula'', John Jones, after [[Henry Fuseli]] (c. 1771)
  • John Sutcliffe]]: Beatrice overhears Hero and Ursula.
  • fr}}, 1770
  • [[John Gielgud]] and [[Margaret Leighton]] in the 1959 Broadway production of ''Much Ado About Nothing''
  • ''Hero'', [[John William Wright]] (c.1849)
  • Print of [[Ellen Terry]] as Beatrice and [[Henry Irving]] as Benedick in an 1887 performance of the play
  • [[John Gielgud]] as Benedick in a 1959 production
  • Drawing of [[Herbert Beerbohm Tree]] as Benedick and [[Winifred Emery]] as Beatrice in a 1905 production. Act II, Scene v: "Kill Claudio".
  • Swooning of Hero in the Church scene by [[Alfred Elmore]]
COMEDY PLAY BY WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
Much Ado about Nothing; Conrade; Borachio; Benedick; Much adoe about nothing; MAAN; Governor Leonato; Much Adoe About Nothing; Much ado about nothing; Much Ado About Nothing (title); Bendick and Beatrice
·noun A married man, or a man newly married.

Wikipedia

You Haven't Done Nothin'

"You Haven't Done Nothin" is a 1974 funk single by Stevie Wonder, taken from his album Fulfillingness' First Finale and featuring background vocals by The Jackson 5. The politically aware song became Wonder's fourth Number 1 pop hit and his tenth Number 1 soul hit. It also reached Number 1 in Canada. In the UK the single spent five weeks on the chart, peaking at Number 30.

The song was one of his angriest political statements and was aimed squarely at President Richard Nixon, who resigned two days after the record's release. The Jackson Five sing the words "Doo da wop!" repeatedly in the chorus, when Wonder sings "Jackson 5, join along with me, say". The song also features a thick clavinet track and an early appearance of the drum machine. The B-side "Big Brother", also a political statement, was taken from Wonder's 1972 album Talking Book.

Billboard described "You Haven't Done Nothin'" as being "exceptionally powerful" and more subtle than most protest songs, particularly praising the synthesiser arrangement and the vocal performance. Cash Box called it a "super track filled with the memories of the great 'Superstition' a while back" and said that "musically, horns, keyboards, bass and guitar highlight and vocally, aside from Stevie's magic, the Jackson 5 is right in there on 'doo wops.'" Record World called it "a message song to end them all" in which Wonder "deals directly with those who'd only promise their way to a better world."