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35 Sentences With "take your clothes off"

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

Not having to take your clothes off to get somewhere in LA?
One more reason not to take your clothes off to get somewhere.
It's very difficult to come out and just take your clothes off.
"Are you just supposed to never take your clothes off?" she said.
A-Rod's homers can take your clothes off just by looking at you.
"Theoretically, I could make you take your clothes off at this point," she says.
And letting that go makes it a lot easier to take your clothes off.
Or if you smell before you take your clothes off, just keep them on.
Then you take your clothes off, wash your face and go home, and you're yourself.
So when you take your clothes off, straight away you are reminded that you are different.
I want to make sure you're O.K. overall before I make you take your clothes off.
To be willing to take your clothes off in front of two complete strangers is also very brave.
" She added: "At the end of the day, when you take your clothes off, they smell of soot and smoke.
They said, 'Now you can take your clothes off,' and I said, 'Oh, is this where are we doing the commercial?
You lose all this weight, you're excited, and then you take your clothes off and you have all this excess skin.
Now, "Sex Machine" is a 13-minute instrumental track, but I became convinced Sly was singing "take your clothes off" throughout.
"If the guards find you, even with just one antelope, they beat you and make you take your clothes off," they wrote.
Modern Love "Aren't you going to take your clothes off?" she asked, her fingers pulling at the edges of my T-shirt.
Preparation is key "People think you just turn up, take your clothes off and run – so much more goes into it," explains Roberts.
You don't feel them when they are doing it, and then you take your clothes off and find out you are covered with blood.
" But like a good future husband, he took off his shirt and dropped his drawers when Bella told him, "Shut up and take your clothes off.
If the sight of Trump's signature handshake suddenly makes you want to take your clothes off, no worries; Allas Sea Pool also has a public sauna.
"I would get there and the lights are off, and he would say to me after I came in and after a hug 'take your clothes off,'" the man wrote in a statement to the police.
To turn someone down — because you didn't know them, because you weren't sure you wanted them, because five drinks weren't enough to make you ready to take your clothes off in the dark — meant you weren't trying hard enough, and so the fact that you were single was all your fault.
Transcription of Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance (1961) (out of copyright) "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance" is a song written by Frank Zappa, with the first officially available version being recorded and released by The Mothers of Invention on their 1968 album We're Only in It for the Money. The song was originally recorded as an instrumental by Frank Zappa in 1961 at Pal Recording Studio.
TV credits include Danger Man, Dad's Army (1969), On the Buses (1969–1970) and as Marlene, an erotic dancer in the third episode of the second series of Doctor in the House: Take Your Clothes Off and Hide. In 1969, Douglas was cast in On the Buses as the bus clippie Susie. Douglas is the cousin of the television personality Stephanie Turner.
Nonetheless, he was successful in securing the rights to Zappa's music for Duckman, and its first season contained songs from throughout Zappa's career including "Peaches en Regalia" and "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance." Later, Csupó was enlisted to create the cover art for the career-spanning Zappa rarities collection The Lost Episodes, released on CD in 1996. In early 2006, Csupó bought a house in Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii.
According to Keysha Davis from BBC Music, the album is a blend of blues, rootsy soul, and soft acoustic rock. Southern Hummingbird and Tweet were commended for creating a "mood in the room that might either make you want to take your clothes off or that of your significant others." Noting the album's musical style as groovy and "just feels good". Songs like "Smoking Cigarettes" were noticed for making the listener feel how Tweet feels.
After that they began another series of regular shows at the Iridium Jazz Club in New York City. Since late 2018 the band acquired a monthly residency at Iridium playing a variety of musical genres and composers with a penchant for Frank Zappa. In 2006 they released their second CD, Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance under the label of Cuneiform Records. In 2009 the group released their third CD, Eddy Loves Frank, also on Cuneiform.
I'd be the opening act for a comic and as I was leaving the stage he'd say, 'Yeah, take your clothes off and wait for me in the dressing room, I'll be right there'. It was demeaning and humiliating for any woman to have that happen publicly." Reddy credits the song as having supernatural inspiration. She said: "I remember lying in bed one night and the words, 'I am strong, I am invincible, I am woman', kept going over and over in my head.
Guys started taking their shirts off, and I remember being like, 'Fuck it, take your clothes off.' Then I [thought], 'I’m being a hypocrite. Why do I feel afraid?' Because people tell us that we’re victims, or that there are predators. Yes, that’s true, but I created this show, I created this community, let me feel safe in my own space. Taking [my] clothes off wasn’t meant to be a statement, but I knew there would be a reaction, but it was a natural thing, to be comfortable.
The song would be known by this title from that point on. The lyrics to this version are a satirical look at social classes and the hippie subculture of the sixties. The song was once again re-recorded by Frank Zappa for his album Lumpy Gravy under the shortened title "Take Your Clothes Off", this time in its more common instrumental form and, as previously mentioned, with the original bridge section that was excluded from the "We're Only In It For The Money" version of the track fully reincorporated. Most live performances of the song by Frank Zappa are instrumental jams.
Buy pasta, think about Gnocchi, try to talk to the woman, > take your clothes off, start shouting… Some endings are moving, others > tragic, others funny, others lurid, others mysterious. It rewards > experimentation, logic, lateral thinking and craziness in equal measure. > Crucially, a number of the less eventful endings provide hints as to your > character’s backstory, which in turn fill your mind with possibilities as to > new actions you could attempt. Hence, Groundhog Day – each attempt you make > at the game is informed by the events of the previous one(s). You revert to > exactly the same situation every time, but though the world hasn’t changed, > your knowledge has – and with that comes an uncanny sense of progress.
The video features Ricky Martin performing in a pub with his band and hanging out with a lady (Nina Morić) at different locations, including New York City. One scene shows several dancers taking their shirts off and performing choreographed dance moves while it rains; this scene coincides with the line in the pre- chorus "She'll make you take your clothes off and go dancing in the rain". Various snippets of the video seem to merge into each other over the duration of the song. Towards the end of the video, Martin gets distracted by his lady passenger while driving, causing him to drive erratically and causing another car to veer and hit a fire hydrant, releasing a fountain of water; this was also the first scene of the video.
The first instance of lyrics being written for the melody is on a 1965 demo tape by The Mothers Of Invention on which the song is recorded as "I'm So Happy I Could Cry." The lyrics describe the sincere love of a man to a "girl he left behind him when he went out to see this great, big world". This version, released on the posthumous Frank Zappa album Joe's Corsage, also contains a bridge section that is not included in any other version of the song, save for the instrumental version that appears at the end of the "Lumpy Gravy" LP. At one point, the tune (without lyrics) was referred to by a working title of "Never On Sunday" (coincidentally the title of another very popular and oft-recorded song by Greek composer Manos Hatzidakis, written around the same time that Zappa wrote his song). Two years later, in 1967, Zappa wrote entirely new lyrics to the tune and it was finally re-recorded by The Mothers Of Invention (in a more abbreviated arrangement, with the bridge section excised) as "Take Your Clothes Off When You Dance" for the album We're Only in It for the Money.

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