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27 Sentences With "lazy bones"

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

But, 'tis the season for the lazy-bones staple that's now fashion-approved: the hoodie.
I made it with a local photographer/good friend of mine Bronte Godden (professionally known as Lazy Bones).
No sooner did Americans have TVs in their homes than Zenith invented a remote control, calling it Lazy Bones, in 1950.
Somewhere inside your lazy bones, there waits a hyper-productive, highly motivated version of you ready to be unleashed upon the world.
Today, we're premiering the very Petra Collins-core video for "Summer Holiday", which was directed by Murphy and her friend Lazy Bones.
Still, take a look at Martha when she's just chillin':Photo: GettyShe's just a big floppy-skinned lazy bones—really not that ugly.
The rhythm, I suspect, would have been more languorous, as if the weather had seeped into people's lazy bones, whereas Guadagnino, an instinctive modernist, is more incisive.
At first glance, "Farm Egg" seems like a joke, a step backward in our global progress, solving a problem that we don't actually have — just go to the damn store and buy a half-dozen eggs, lazy bones!
There is so much good stuff in this grid: I INSIST, the fabulous debut of EMPHASIS MINE, SETS A GOAL, LATE CALL, PORTRAIT GALLERY, SQUAT JUMP (and please take a moment to note the Scrabbly goodness in the center of this grid), BOOK PROPOSAL, LAZY BONES, LE MONDE, ON A DATE, SLAYED and more.
It is estimated he made approximately 650 rods in his lifetime. Hoagy B. Carmichael was making the documentary film Creating the Garrison Fly RodCreating the Garrison Fly Rod. Hoagy B. Carmichael. Lazy Bones.
Zenith Radio Advertisement for "Lazy Bones" remote control, 1951 RCA's promoting radio manufacturers to build televisions with its no royalty policy got Zenith Radio into the TV business during the end of the 1940s. McDonald, whose aversion to commercials was well-known, wanted Zenith to produce and sell a remote control. In 1950 Zenith came up with a remote control called the "Lazy Bones" which was connected with wires to the TV set. The next development was the "Flashmatic" (1955), designed by Eugene Polley, a wireless remote control that used a light beam to signal the TV (with a photosensitive pickup device) to change stations.
On 31 August 2017, the band released Modern Interactions via ADA Worldwide and Warner Music Australia. Callum's friend Chris Bye (bass guitar) joined the band in late 2017. On 25 July 2018, they released "Pillars", the lead single from their third EP, Lazy Bones Tapes. On 26 October, they released "Golden Slums", the second single from the EP. On 1 February 2019, they released "Cool Mind Blue", the third single from the EP. On 11 October 2019, they released "I Swear", the fourth and final single from the EP. Lazy Bones Tapes was released on 1 November 2019 via ADA Worldwide and Warner Music Australia.
1966 Side 2: # The Lazy Bones: "I'm Driftin'" – Rel. 1967 # Rob Hoeke R&B; Group: "So Blue (Because of You)" – Rel. 1966 # Rob Hoeke R&B; Group: "Margio" – Rel. 1966 # AB&C;: "Vies" # The Outsiders: "Filthy Rich" # The Outsiders: "You Remind Me" # The Zipps: "Marijuana" – Rel.
Levin Minnemann Rudess or LMR is a debut collaboration album from half of Liquid Tension Experiment; bassist Tony Levin (King Crimson, Peter Gabriel, Stick Men) and Dream Theater keyboardist Jordan Rudess with the addition of drummer Marco Minnemann (Steven Wilson, The Aristocrats, Joe Satriani). It was released on September 5, 2013, by Lazy Bones Recordings.
Nowadays we would consider that a sign of the "maturity" of the Dutch economy at the time. At the time (and by later historians with an ax to grind) this shift was often evaluated negatively. Making money from money, instead of from toil in trade or industry was seen as a lazy-bones' pursuit.
Nicknamed "Lazy Bones", First Landing was the American Champion Two-Year-Old Colt. One of his best wins came at Saratoga in August when he took the Hopeful Stakes by five and a half lengths from First Minister. He did not achieve the same success racing at age three. In the 1959 racing season, he finished second in the Wood Memorial Stakes.
Lazy Bones was originally a comic strip in the British comic Whizzer and Chips. It made its first appearance in 1978. The strip was about a boy called Benny Bones, who would constantly fall asleep everywhere, much to the annoyance of his parents. Until 1986, the strip was drawn by Colin Whittock, and moved to Buster in 1990 after Whizzer and Chips ended.
Cole's second album, Wild at Heart, dealt with her divorce; the track "Lazy Bones" was written about Albeck and their short marriage. According to Albeck, "it was tough sometimes when we were touring together, living together, bringing up the baby together and having to be on stage together at night. I guess I decided I didn't want the relationship anymore. That was pretty tough for Bec at the time".
They also recorded their classics "Lazy Bones", "Sweet Sue", "Lulu's Back In Town", "Bye-Bye Blackbird", "Sleepy Head", and "Shoe Shine Boy". Their film appearances included Twenty Million Sweethearts (Warner Brothers, 1934), Operator 13 (MGM, 1934) and Broadway Gondolier (Warner Brothers, 1935). In 1934, The Mills Brothers became the first African- Americans to give a command performance before British royalty. They performed at the Regal Theatre for a special audience: King George V and Queen Mary.
While he actually composed such works, his symphonies after Dante and Faust as well as his Piano Sonata are examples for it, he kept making fantasies and transcriptions until the end of his life. There is no doubt that it was an easier task for Liszt to make fantasies and transcriptions than composing large scale original works. It was this reason for which Princess Wittgenstein frequently called him "fainéant" ("lazy-bones").For example, see: Ramann: Lisztiana, p.
1950s TV Remote by Motorola SABA corded TV remote The first remote intended to control a television was developed by Zenith Radio Corporation in 1950. The remote, called "Lazy Bones," was connected to the television by a wire. A wireless remote control, the "Flashmatic," was developed in 1955 by Eugene Polley. It worked by shining a beam of light onto one of four photoelectric cells, but the cell did not distinguish between light from the remote and light from other sources.
A trailer for the album was released on June 21, 2012 on the band's YouTube channel, it included a preview of the song "Fuck Time". A preview of the song "Lazy Bones" was featured in a special Green Day themed level pack of Angry Birds Friends. Green Day also released previews of the songs "Stray Heart", "Makeout Party", "Wild One", "Fuck Time", "Lady Cobra" and "Nightlife" during an interview on BBC Radio One. A very short preview of the song "See You Tonight" was featured in one of their tour videos.
Lazybones or "Lazy Bones" is a Tin Pan Alley song written in 1933, with lyrics by Johnny Mercer and music by Hoagy Carmichael. Mercer was from Savannah, Georgia, and resented the Tin Pan Alley attitude of rejecting southern regional vernacular in favor of artificial southern songs written by people who had never been to the South. Alex Wilder attributes much of the popularity of this song to Mercer's perfect regional lyric. He wrote the lyrics to "Lazybones" as a protest against those artificial "Dixies", announcing the song's authenticity at the start with "Long as there is chicken gravy on your rice".
IMDb profile; accessed March 14, 2014. He appeared in a short film made by Lee DeForest in the short-lived sound-on-film process Phonofilm, titled A Boston Star: Borrah Minevitch, which premiered at the Rivoli Theater in New York City on 15 April 1923. He and the Rascals appeared in Lazy Bones (1934), which was a part live action, part animated film released by Fleischer Studios as one of their Screen Songs series, the live-action short Borrah Minevitch and His Harmonica Rascals (Vitaphone, 1935) and Borrah Minevitch and his Harmonica School (Warner Bros., 1942) directed by Jean Negulesco.
Using pseudonyms meant more airtime: radio producers might play several songs by the same artist during a programme without realizing they had devoted so much airtime to one person. King's 1971 releases included a version of Bob Dylan's "Baby, You've Been On My Mind", released as Nemo, which failed to chart; The Sun Has Got His Hat On, also as Nemo; "Sugar, Sugar" as Sakkarin; "Leap Up and Down (Wave Your Knickers in the Air)" by St Cecelia (this one a real band, rather than a pseudonym), which went to number 12; and "Lazy Bones", "Flirt" and "Hooked on a Feeling" – all released under his own name. Bell Records asked King to produce four songs for the Bay City Rollers, including their first hit, "Keep on Dancing", on which King sang the 13 backing vocals himself. Released in May 1971, the single reached number nine.
He has contributed liner notes, essays, video interviews, and release consulting to projects for record labels including Abstract Logix, Blue Note, Favored Nations, Grass-Tops, Lazy Bones Recordings, Magna Carta, Panegyric, and 7d Media, as well as artists such as Pierre Bensusan, The Crimson ProjeKCt, Pete Levin, Tony Levin, Pat Mastelotto, John McLaughlin, Marco Minnemann, Markus Reuter, Jordan Rudess, Julie Slick, Sonar, Tanya Tagaq, David Torn, Us3, Vân Ánh Võ, Alan White, Steven Wilson, and Yes. Prasad is the author of the book Innerviews: Music Without Borders. The eBook edition achieved a #1 placement on iTunes’ Arts & Entertainment and Music charts. The book features interviews with 24 musicians, including Björk, Stanley Clarke, Ani DiFranco, Béla Fleck, Bill Laswell, John McLaughlin, Public Enemy, David Sylvian, and Tangerine Dream. Prasad’s work has been excerpted in more than 30 music-related books, including In a Silent Way: A Portrait of Joe Zawinul by Brian Glasser, In The Court of King Crimson by Sid Smith, On Some Faraway Beach: The Life and Times of Brian Eno by David Sheppard, and So What: The Life of Miles Davis by John Szwed.
In 1957 Chidzero published a Shona novel Nzvengamutsvairo (the name has been translated from Shona as "Mr Lazy-Bones" or "Broom-Dodger") which detailed the condition of workers on Rhodesian farms and set out his vision of an integrated, racially tolerant society. Armed with a grant from the Ford Foundation, Chidzero returned to Rhodesia in 1960, intending to teach at the University of Rhodesia and Nyasaland; his offer to work there was withdrawn when the segregated university discovered the interracial nature of Chidzero's marriage. Chidzero joined the United Nations in 1960. He began in the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa as an economic affairs officer in Addis Ababa and from 1963 to 1968 as an assistant to the UN Technical Assistance Board in Kenya. From 1968 to 1980 Chidzero worked for the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD): from 1968 to 1977 he was the Director of Commodities and between 1977 and 1980 he served as UNCTAD's Deputy Secretary General After the 1965 Unilateral Declaration of Independence by Ian Smith, Chidzero played a role in the early liberation struggle negotiations for Zimbabwe.

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