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"pushing up daisies" Antonyms

13 Sentences With "pushing up daisies"

How to use pushing up daisies in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pushing up daisies" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pushing up daisies". Mastering all the usages of "pushing up daisies" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Most of the characters in this production, adapted from Edgar Lee Masters's "Spoon River Anthology," may be pushing up daisies.
But emotions aside (though only for 'Trigger Bang' and 'Pushing Up Daisies'), it's with her fashion that Allen has the most fun.
Worsham is scheduled to tour Europe next month with the CMA Songwriters Series before opening for Brothers Osborne — whose song "Pushing Up Daisies" the newlyweds had their first dance to — starting on Oct.
Finally, just to put the nail in the coffin of the fake death notice, he tweeted out a picture of his 84th birthday bash in March, nearly six months after Google had him down as pushing up daisies.
" In an interview with Westword, a Denver online newsletter, in 2006, Dr. Gray said, "When I am pushing up daisies, I am very sure that we will find that humans have warmed the globe slightly, but that it's nothing like what they're saying.
Built on a rolling site that once was a nursery, players for most of the day were pushing up daisies in the third round as the scoring average topped 76 as the leaders completed the front nine and the wind finally calmed.
Norman John Pace (born 17 February 1953 in Dudley, Worcestershire) is an English actor and comedian, best known as one half of the comedy duo Hale and Pace with his friend and comic partner Gareth Hale. Both former teachers, they fronted several television programmes jointly, most notably Hale and Pace, Pushing Up Daisies, h&p;@bbc and Jobs for the Boys.
"Pushing Up Daisies" is an uplifting song, that was dedicated to Allen's boyfriend Daniel London (Meridian Dan). Lyrically the song explores themes of wanting to enter a new relationship but fearing it is too soon. The song also makes references to The Beatles' song "When I'm Sixty-Four" and the NHS. The album closes with "Cake", a "summery" R&B; song that lyrically references patriarchy.
Before appearing on TV, they did a series of radio shows for Radio 4 based on their show at the Tramshed. Their early TV breaks came on The Entertainers (1984), Pushing Up Daisies (1984) and they went on to appear in the Channel 4 sketch show Coming Next (1985) and the Saturday Gang (1986). They also appeared in The Young Ones three times, in the episodes "Flood", "Nasty" and "Time".
We've got to show that society and the police department, and not a bunch of dirty rats, are running this town. It is the wish of the people of Chicago that you hunt down these criminals and kill them without mercy. Your cars are equipped with machine guns and you will meet the enemies of society on equal terms. See to it they don't have you pushing up daisies.
"Pushing Up Daisies" was originally recorded by Kevin Welch on his 1995 album Life Down Here on Earth, while "Big Money" was originally recorded under the title "It Pays Big Money" by Mark Chesnutt on his 2000 album Lost in the Feeling. Additionally, "Don't Cross the River" was previously recorded by America on their 1972 album Homecoming. "Squeeze Me In" was previously recorded by Lee Roy Parnell on his 1995 album We All Get Lucky Sometimes.
He also appeared as an impressionist on the BBC's Carrott's Lib between 1983 and 1984, and he starred in his own sketch show Pushing Up Daisies (re-titled Coming Next for the following season) from 1984 to 1985 alongside Hale and Pace and Carla Mendonça. In 1987, he appeared as a French Revolutionary in Blackadder the Third (episode "Nob and Nobility") and did various parts in The Young Ones both as an actor and a voice-over.
Gareth Irvin Hale (born 15 January 1953 in Hull) is an English comedian and actor, who is best known as one half of the comedy duo Hale and Pace, with his friend and comic partner Norman Pace. Both former teachers, their comedy partnership has fronted several television programmes, most notably Hale and Pace, Pushing Up Daisies, h&p;@bbc and Jobs for the Boys. As straight actors they played the title roles in the 1993 ITV dramatisation of Dalziel and Pascoe and made a guest appearance together in Survival, a 1989 Doctor Who serial. Hale was a regular on the Channel 5 soap opera Family Affairs, playing Doug MacKenzie (2003–2005).

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