two hamburgers to go, please - tradução para grego
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two hamburgers to go, please - tradução para grego

BLUES SONG CREDITED TO BIG JOE WILLIAMS
Baby please don't go; Baby Please Don't Go
  • Angus Young and Bon Scott at the [[Ulster Hall]] in August 1979

two hamburgers to go, please      
δύο χάμπουργκερ για το δρόμο
go to sleep         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Go 2 Sleep; Go To Sleep
πάω για ύπνο
take out         
  • Customers queueing for takeaway at a [[fish and chip shop]] in England
  • Street food vendors in early 20th century New York City.
  • Thermopolium in [[Herculaneum]]
  • scooter]] used for [[Pizza Hut]] pizza delivery in [[Hong Kong]].
  • A market stall in [[Thailand]] selling take-out food
  • Disposable chopsticks in a university cafeteria trash bin in Japan.
A PREPARED MEAL OR OTHER FOOD ITEMS, PURCHASED AT A RESTAURANT OR FAST FOOD OUTLET TO BE CONSUMED OFFSITE
Take-away food; Takeaway food; Take-out food; Take-away; Take out; Take away; Carryout; Carry-out; Takeout; Take-aways; Takeout food; Takeout container; Take Out; Imbiss; Takeaway; To-go; Take-Away; Food Takeaway; Taking out; Take Away
βγάζω

Definição

it takes two to tango

Wikipédia

Baby, Please Don't Go

"Baby, Please Don't Go" is a traditional blues song that was popularized by Delta blues musician Big Joe Williams in 1935. Many cover versions followed, leading to its description as "one of the most played, arranged, and rearranged pieces in blues history" by French music historian Gérard Herzhaft.

After World War II, Chicago blues and rhythm and blues artists adapted the song to newer music styles. In 1952, a doo-wop version by the Orioles reached the top ten on the R&B chart. In 1953, Muddy Waters recorded the song as an electric Chicago-ensemble blues piece, which influenced many subsequent renditions. By the early 1950s, the song became a blues standard.

In the 1960s, "Baby, Please Don't Go" became a popular rock song after the Northern Irish group Them recorded it in 1964. Jimmy Page, a studio guitarist at the time, participated in the recording session, possibly on rhythm guitar. Subsequently, Them's uptempo rock arrangement also made it a rock standard. AC/DC and Aerosmith are among the rock groups who have recorded the song. "Baby, Please Don't Go" has been inducted into both the Blues and Rock and Roll Halls of Fame.