please comb my hair back from the forehead - translation to greek
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please comb my hair back from the forehead - translation to greek

UK RADIO PROGRAM
Lines From My Grandfather's Forehead

please comb my hair back from the forehead      
παρακαλώ χτενίστε τα μαλλιά μου προς τα πίσω από το μέτωπο.
Παρακαλώ χτενίστε τα μαλλιά μου προς τα πίσω από το μέτωπο.      
Please comb my hair back from the forehead.
hair dye         
  • Couplers are chemical compounds that define the color of the hair dye. Shown here are three red couplers (A, B, C), two yellow-green couplers (D, E) and a blue coupler (F).
  • A [[woman]] dyeing her [[hair]].
  • Lafayette]] in 1830, aged 73, with pitch-black hair (painting by [[Louise-Adéone Drölling]]).
  • 520px
  • 200px
  • 520px
  • Actress [[Margot Robbie]] with bleached blond hair
  • Shelf with a great number of different hair colours, each having a colour code printed on the packaging, at a hairdresser in Germany
  • Hair with blonde highlights
PRACTICE OF CHANGING THE HAIR COLOR
Hair dye; Hair dyeing; Hair dying; Dyed hair; Hair dyes; Hair colouring; Hairdye; Hair colorants; Metallic Dye; Pink hair; Dyeing hair; Bayalage; Green hair; Multi-coloured hair; Temporary hair colorants; Purple shampoo; Hair toner; Plant-based hair dye
βαφή μαλλιών

Definition

comb
¦ noun
1. an article with a row of narrow teeth, used for untangling or styling the hair.
a short curved comb worn by women to hold the hair in place.
2. a device for separating and dressing textile fibres.
Austral./NZ the lower, fixed cutting piece of a sheep-shearing machine.
3. the red fleshy crest on the head of a domestic fowl, especially a cock.
4. a honeycombining
¦ verb
1. untangle or style (the hair) with a combining
2. prepare (wool, flax, or cotton) for manufacture with a combining
3. search carefully and systematically.
Origin
OE camb, of Gmc origin.

Wikipedia

Lines from My Grandfather's Forehead

Lines From My Grandfather's Forehead, is a British comedy radio sketch show, first broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 1971. Two series of eight episodes were broadcast, the first from 15 February 1971 to 5 April 1971, the second was transmitted from 9 July 1972 to 26 July 1972. In addition, there were two special episodes. A Christmas special, entitled Lines From My Grandfather Christmas's Forehead, was broadcast on 24 December 1971; and a compilation of selected items from past editions, under the title Just A Few Lines From My Grandfather's Forehead, was broadcast on 27 August 1977.

The show was created by BBC Radio producer John Fawcett Wilson and Ronnie Barker and featured Barker together with Terence Brady and Pauline Yates and Gordon Langford at the piano. Some editions also featured guitarist Dick Abell. The theme music was a short excerpt taken from Divertissement by Jacques Ibert.

Each programme was a sequence of comedy sketches, monologues and comic songs. The writers were credited on each recording but the items they wrote were not named, so identifying the author of a particular item is difficult. Among the writers was Gerald Wiley, which was a pseudonym used by Ronnie Barker to submit material without using his own name. Other writers for the series included Jim Eldridge, Spike Milligan and Harold Pinter. The then director of programmes for BBC Radio, Gerard Mansell, described the show as having a "very individual type of humour, quite unlike that of any other TV or radio programme".