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Wild Card Games Who Knows Where? - The Global Location Guessing Family Board Game

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I'm with you. I think the expression you chose--organically, as said above--conveys just what you wanted. Who knows where the time goes? was written by Sandy Denny and featured on a number of albums, including versions with The Strawbs and Fairport Convention. Apk, "now" was intended to be against the second clause, as in: until recently he did know where Bill was, but now he doesn't. again with just voice and guitar. This was included on the album All Our Own Work, which was released much later, in 1973.

who knows where? - MobileRead Forums Punctuation - who knows where? - MobileRead Forums

and later used the title as the name of her album Who Knows Where the Time Goes, released in 1968. Also in 1968 Sandy joined Fairport Convention. I realised after I posted that my original sentence used "knew" rather than "knows" (I think I confused myself by trying to be clever in the subject).Sandy Denny: Who Knows Where the Time Goes?". Mainly Norfolk: English Folk and Other Good Music. Reinhard Zierke . Retrieved 2 June 2017. This particular chart appears over and over again across the internet and it has one major mistake. In the third line of the verses, he has the sequence as F#m G#m A G#m A. In fact, the correct sequence is See also: The Beatles - Let It Be The Beatles - And I Love Her Eagles - Hotel California (Acoustic) The Beatles - While My Guitar Gently Weeps Eric Clapton - Wonderful Tonight The Beatles - Here Comes The Sun Agree with Penforhire. (Except that I don't think the sentence is awkward.) The meaning of your sentence is absolutely clear. Technically you'd be correct to add the hyphens, but modern usage does not tend to use hyphens in that sort of situation unless the meaning is in jeopardy. (And it just looks clunky as hell if you do use them. I suppose, if you're writing for grammarians you could use them. If for normal people, no.) Remember, good writing is about effectively communicating, and you've done that with your original sentence. Plus, when you start messing with the original "organic" sentence, you rarely improve upon it. Eva Cassidy's version was featured in the Season 1 Episode 10 of the Netflix drama Firefly Lane. [8]

Who knows? - Idioms by The Free Dictionary Who knows? - Idioms by The Free Dictionary

A Prairie Home Companion for December 31, 2011". American Public Media. 2012 . Retrieved 27 January 2012. The song is slow-paced, with Sandy observing events, and likening them to timeless natural things. The song is in E major with unusual jazz style chord progressions The person, let's call him Carl, is lonely and thinking of his two best friends, but their separation from him are independent events. Abby has just departed from Carl - which is how Carl comes to be sitting there feeling sorry for himself. Bill left a long time earlier, but regular messages had kept Carl informed about where Bill was, however, the most recent message said that Bill was travelling further north and that Carl might not hear from him for a long time. They come together into a single sentence/thought, not because the events are related, but because they are his best friends and he misses them both. I did consider completely splitting in the clauses, but it doesn't read as smoothly in the paragraph that this comes from. The emotional connection is intended - he's missing his friends. I think that in the larger context the meaning is clearer. (The reader has just come from Abby's departure, and knows what is happening to Bill from a previous scene.) It's not actually a question, so a terminating question mark seems wrong. Older texts had no qualms about extra punctuation in the middle of a sentence, but it seems that more modern works shun the idea. Otherwise I was thinking something like this might work:might be clearer then the "and" building the connection between the clauses there. I think many readers will see as joining the thoughts more then you intend them too. Find sources: "Who Knows Where the Time Goes?"– news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR ( April 2021) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message) I'm a fan of the hyphens because it immediately communicates the expression. Without them, the the reader (well. this reader at least) is drawn to assume "Bill was who..." is leading in something totally different: "Bill was who he most needed to speak to?" Bill was who knows best how to handle this?" Who Knows Where the Time Goes?" became a signature song for both Denny and Fairport Convention, and has been covered by many artists. American singer Judy Collins heard the original demo recording of 1967 and recorded a cover version of the song. She released it on the B-side of her single, "Both Sides, Now",

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