Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Cielito Lindo" is a Mexican folk song or copla popularized in 1882 by Mexican author Quirino Mendoza y Cortés (c. 1862 – 1957). [1] It is roughly translated as "Lovely Sweet One". Although the word cielo means "sky" or "heaven", it is also a term of endearment comparable to "sweetheart" or "honey".
Ay ay ay ay" is the refrain of popular Mexican song "Cielito Lindo". Ay ay ay ay and similar phrases may also refer to: "Limerick" (song), a traditional drinking song with a phonetically similar refrain "Ay Ay Ay Ay Moosey", a 1981 song by Modern Romance
Carlos Coy (born October 5, 1970), known professionally as SPM (an initialism for South Park Mexican), is an American rapper and convicted sex offender. His stage name was incorporated from his Mexican heritage and the South Park neighborhood in Houston, Texas , where he was raised.
"¡Ay, ay, ay!", subtitled "Reminiscencias cuyanas", is a song composed in 1913 by the Chilean-born composer, pianist, singer and publisher Osmán Pérez Freire. [1] Freire (born in Santiago in 1880 [ 2 ] ), who emigrated to Mendoza, Argentina in c.1886-1890, was a figure of some note in the evolution of Tango . [ 3 ]
The lyrics for the Limerick Song are usually ribald and sometimes original. Here are some from the public domain book Sea Songs and Ditties: There was a young lady named Lou who said as the parson withdrew--"Now the Vicar is quicker, And thicker, and slicker, And two inches longer than you. [1] Chorus: That was a cute little rhyme
"D-Yikes!" is the sixth episode of the eleventh season and the 159th overall episode of the American animated sitcom South Park. It first aired on Comedy Central in the United States on April 11, 2007. In the episode, frustrated with men, Mrs. Garrison makes the boys write an essay on The Old Man and the Sea. The boys hire Mexican day laborers ...
Chef Aid: The South Park Album is a 1998 soundtrack album based on the American animated comedy series South Park. Several well-known artists perform on the record, which was mainly produced by Rick Rubin. Chef Aid contains a number of songs from and inspired by the show, while other songs are largely independent from South Park.
It should only contain pages that are South Park Mexican albums or lists of South Park Mexican albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about South Park Mexican albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .