C R O - significado y definición. Qué es C R O
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Qué (quién) es C R O - definición

1975 SINGLE BY BILLY CONNOLLY
D I V O R C E; D. I. V. O. R. C. E.

R-O-C-K         
1956 SONG PERFORMED BY BILL HALEY & HIS COMETS
"R-O-C-K" is a 1956 rock and roll song recorded and co-written by Bill Haley and released as a Decca single. The song appeared in the 1956 Columbia Pictures movie Rock Around the Clock.
O. M. C. Narayanan Nambudiripad         
INDIAN LINGUIST
O M C Narayanan Nambudiripad; O.M.C. Narayanan Nambudiripad; OMC Narayanan Nambudiripad
O M C Narayanan Nambudiripad, an eminent Sanskrit scholar was born to the famous Nambudiri family of Olappamanna Mana on 24 June 1910 in Vellinezhi (Palakkad District, Kerala, India). He is known for his translation into Malayalam of the Rigveda.
Charlie Marshall (rugby union)         
BRITISH RUGBY UNION PLAYER
C R Marshall; C.R. Marshall; CR Marshall; C. R. Marshall
Charles Richard Marshall (2 March 1886 – 23 August 1947) was a British rugby union player who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics. He was a member of the British rugby union team, which won the silver medal.

Wikipedia

D.I.V.O.R.C.E.

"D.I.V.O.R.C.E." is a 1975 UK number-one single by Scottish folk singer and comedian Billy Connolly. A comedy song, it reached No. 1 for one week in November 1975, and was one of the few songs of its genre to reach this milestone.

The song is a cover of Sheb Wooley's parody of the Tammy Wynette song "D-I-V-O-R-C-E", and Connolly's version to date has been his only No. 1 UK single, though in the late 1970s he had a further two UK hits which parodied contemporary songs. He later dropped musical performances from his act.

"D.I.V.O.R.C.E." has a similar theme to Wynette's original in that the events in the song lead to a couple divorcing, however in the parody, the words are spelled out to withhold the truth from a dog rather than a child as in Wynette's version, and the divorce is sparked by a riotous visit to a veterinarian that results in the husband being bitten by both the dog and his wife.

Some versions of the song, such as the live performance included on the album Get Right Intae Him! which was released as the single, are censored, with the letters "f'ing c" being bleeped.