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Games & Quizzes
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Make correct pairs from two columns
PERFECT HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.PERFECT_HITS * 20}} |
HITS | {{lyricTraining.stats.HITS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.HITS * 10}} |
LONGEST STREAK | {{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS}} | +{{lyricTraining.stats.LONGEST_STREAKS * 10}} |
REMAINING TIME | {{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}}s | +{{lyricTraining.timeout / 1000}} |
TOTAL | +{{lyricTraining.exp}} |
How to use "gallery" in a sentence?
You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.
/myo͞oˈzēəm/
building in which objects of historical, scientific, artistic, or cultural interest are stored and exhibited.
/ˈpasij/
Journey by ship from one place to another. subject microorganisms or cells to passage.
The word "gallery" is a countable noun.
The plural of "gallery" is "galleries".
Originally, a portrayal of a group of disreputable individuals, such as want ...
Originally, a portrayal of a group of disreputable individuals, such as wanted criminals, but later used humorously for any group photograph. The term, also spelled originated in the mid-1800s for a collection of criminals’ portraits. A century later it was used more lightly, as in “Bob Dylan, Arthur Lee, Keith Richard, Bob Marley—the rogue’s gallery of rebel input that forms the hard stuff at the centre of rock” (Kathy McKnight and John Tobler, 1977).
A police collection of pictures of criminals and suspects kept for identific ...
A police collection of pictures of criminals and suspects kept for identification purposes. For example, . [Mid-1800s]
A rowdy audience. The original peanut galleries were the cheapest, which is ...
A rowdy audience. The original peanut galleries were the cheapest, which is to say, the highest, seats in a theater or vaudeville house. Their patrons heckled and often threw peanuts (the least expensive items sold at the snack bar) at performers who didn't measure up to the audience's expectations. The most popular children's television show of the mid-20th century was Howdy Doody (Howdy, Mr. Bluster, Flub-A-Dub and other marionettes interacted with their human friends led by Buffalo Bob Smith and Clarabelle the Clown). The studio audience were children who sat in the Peanut Gallery and were encouraged to laugh, cheer, or boo at the show's riotous happenings.