When we're out together dancing, cheek to cheek. Requested by recent visitor (Ray Acosta, who was looking for it as "Dancing Cheek to Cheek.") I did what I often do: went looking before checking to see if I already had it. But in searching for audio sources, I found one Fred Asta...
Click onhighlightedlyrics to explain. Heaven, I'm in Heaven, And my heart beats so that I can hardly speak; And I seem to find the happiness I seek When we're out together dancing, cheek to cheek. Heaven, I'm in Heaven, And the cares that hang around me thro' the week ...
have the cheek to do sth. 有脸做某事(指做某事很无耻) on the cheek 在脸颊上(亲吻或拍打)词根词缀及记忆方法: 虽然“cheek”这个词本身没有明确的词根和词缀结构,但你可以通过反复使用和练习来加深记忆。同时,结合上述助记技巧和常用词组进行记忆也是有效的方法。 单词造句: ...
As dancing cheek to cheek (Come on and) Dance with me I want my arm(s) about you That (Those) charm(s) about you Will carry me through (Right up) To heaven, I'm in heaven And my heart beats so that I can hardly speak
As our last chance, dancing cheek to cheek Now baby, you and me with this centre of feel,You and me, for we don¡¯t know the words to speak,We do it nice and slow,We do this somewhere, where we could raise the wind blows,Everybody is talking that we move...
Words for "cheek," "jaw," and "chin" tend to run together in IE languages (compare PIE *genw-, source of Greek genus "jaw, cheek," geneion "chin," and English chin); Aristotle considered the chin as the front of the "jaws" and the cheeks as the back of them. The other Old ...
As our last chance, dancing cheek to cheek Now baby, you and me with this centre of feel,You and me, for we don't know the words to speak,We do it nice and slow,We do this somewhere, where we could raise the wind blows,Everybody is talking that we move the flow Tal...
Couples were dancing cheek to cheek. Collocations Physical appearance Extra ExamplesTopics Bodyb2 Oxford Collocations Dictionary Definitions on the go Look up any word in the dictionary offline, anytime, anywhere with the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary app. -cheeked (in adjectives) having...
1520s, "to look obliquely" (since 18c. usually implying a lustful, wolfish, malicious intent), probably from Middle English nounler"cheek," from Old Englishhleor"the cheek, the face," from Proto-Germanic*hleuza-"near the ear," from*hleuso-"ear," from PIE root*kleu-"to hear." If ...