Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective Describing
country music .
Etymologies
Sorry, no etymologies found.
Examples
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Rondel Somerset, 30, had just come from the hospital and was celebrating the birth of his new baby when he dropped into the bar with its kitschy country-and-western theme for a celebratory drink.
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For some reason the tune from some awful country-and-western song was nagging away at his brain.
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They cue up the most repellently saccharine country-and-western ballads for the bride's first dance with her father, or if not that, something hopelessly inappropriate like "Baby I Need Your Loving."
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"I had asked him about country-and-western music, and he started talking about the ballads of his youth," Mr. Ajemian told Time.
Time bureau chief Robert Ajemian penetrated politicians''psychological armor'
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Like giving it a Western setting, which explains why country-and-western singers Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, and Reba McEntire were among the star-studded cast.
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Mike Perry was the chief engineer, a born-again Christian in his fifties who looked like a country-and-western singer and ran a tight engine room.
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Mike Perry was the chief engineer, a born-again Christian in his fifties who looked like a country-and-western singer and ran a tight engine room.
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Mike Perry was the chief engineer, a born-again Christian in his fifties who looked like a country-and-western singer and ran a tight engine room.
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The wait can be as short as two hours or as long as an entire day, according to participants like unemployed country-and-western singer Harold Summers Jr.
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THOMPKINS: Nkuba's office is in a rickety storefront town called Buliisa, where a gathering of idle men sits across from the Tullow office, listening to country-and-western music.
Comments
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