cut-and-dried answer - перевод на голландский
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cut-and-dried answer - перевод на голландский

1999 SINGLE BY BARENAKED LADIES
Call and answer; Call & Answer

cut-and-dried answer      
pasklaar antwoord
cut and paste         
  • Cut, Copy, and Paste icons in [[ERP5]]
  • Sequence diagram of the copy-paste operation
  • The sequence diagram of cut and paste operation
USER-INTERFACE METHOD OF TRANSFERRING DATA BETWEEN SITES
Copy and paste; Cut-and-paste; Copy-and-paste; Copy & paste; Copy & Paste; Copy and Paste; Copy-and-Paste; Cut and Paste; Cut-and-Paste; Cut & paste; Cut-&-paste; Cut-&-Paste; Cut paste; Cut Paste; Cut-paste; Cut-Paste; Copy-&-paste; Copy-&-Paste; Copy paste; Copy Paste; Copy-paste; Copy-Paste; C & P; Copy & pasting; Copypaste; Copying and pasting; Kopipe; Cut and paste; Copaste; Cut'n paste; Kill ring; Cut, copy and paste; Text move; Block and copy; Block & copy; Copy/paste; C&p; C+P; Cut, copy, & paste; Cut copy paste; Find buffer
n. knippen en plakken
cut glass         
  • Contemporary Czech cut glass in two colours
  • Czech glass-cutter at work
  • Chandelier in the chapel of [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge]], donated in 1732, one of the earliest datable cut glass examples.  The shape follows contemporary brass examples, with glass branches but no "drops"; only the pieces down the stem are cut, mostly with flat facets.<ref>Battie & Cottle, 102</ref>
  • American "brilliant cut" [[punch bowl]] on stand, 1895
  • Montgolfier]]" shape (due to its resemblance to an inverted [[hot air balloon]]),<ref>History</ref> in [[Edinburgh]]
  • Regency]] chandeliers in [[Saltram House]], England
  • [[Waterford Crystal]] factory in 2001
  • engraving]] above, England, late 18th-century
GLASS DECORATED WITH GEOMETRICAL OR REPRESENTATIONAL INCISIONS MADE BY GRINDING AND POLISHING
Cut-glass accent; Cut-glass; Cut crystal
geslepen glas

Определение

copy and paste
<text> (Or "cut and paste", after the paper, scissors and glue method of document production) The system supported by most document editing applications (e.g. text editors) and most operating systems that allows you to select a part of the document and then save it in a temporary buffer (known variously as the "clipboard", "cut buffer", "kill ring"). A "copy" leaves the document unchanged whereas a "cut" deletes the selected part. A "paste" inserts the data from the clipboard at the current position in the document (usually replacing any currently selected data). This may be done more than once, in more than one position and in different documents. More sophisticated operating systems support copy and paste of different data types between different applications, possibly with automatic format conversion, e.g from {rich text} to plain ASCII. GNU Emacs uses the terms "kill" instead of "cut" and "yank" instead of "paste" and data is stored in the "kill ring". [Origin? Macintosh? Xerox?] (1998-07-01)

Википедия

Call and Answer

"Call and Answer" is a song by the Canadian group Barenaked Ladies. It was the third single from their highly successful 1998 album Stunt (the song "Alcohol" had been previously released to radio stations, but was not sold commercially as a single). When released as a single, the song was both remixed and edited into a radio mix which cut from the second verse to the third chorus, skipping a chorus, an instrumental break and the third verse. The remix was a slight adjustment of EQ and levels; not a comprehensive remix involving adding or replacing musical elements. This version was also included on the soundtrack for the film EdTV.

The song was written by Steven Page and his longtime collaborator, Stephen Duffy. All of the vocals in the song are performed by Page; this includes overlapping vocals, harmonies and octaves, and a call-and-response chorus. This, in addition to a long ad-lib outro makes the song a showcase of Page's vocal abilities. In live performances, the backing vocals were performed by bandmates Ed Robertson and Jim Creeggan. The song seems to be about the reconciliation of a tumultuous relationship.

The song was performed on CBC Radio as a tribute to Peter Gzowski on his death in 2002. It was also performed as a duet with Alanis Morissette in 2004 during the co-headlining Au Naturale Tour.