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"A te" is a romantic piano ballad, written by Jovanotti and Franco Santarnecchi and produced by Michele Canova. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The song is a love declaration to Jovanotti's partner, Francesca Valiani, who became his wife in September 2008. [ 5 ]
Bijelo Dugme (trans. White Button) was a Yugoslav rock band, formed in Sarajevo, SR Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1974. Bijelo Dugme is widely considered to have been the most popular and the best-selling band ever to exist in the former Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and one of the most prominent acts of the Yugoslav rock scene and Yugoslav popular music in general.
"A Ti" is a song written by the Guatemalan singer-songwriter Ricardo Arjona for his tenth studio album, Adentro (2005). It was the fourth single released from the album in 2006 and was later included on Arjona's compilation album, Quién Dijo Ayer (2007), alongside a reworked version with the Italian singer Eros Ramazzotti .
He threatened to sue Haiducii and Universo if they would not pull back her version. According to Balan, they had relied on an Italian law which they alleged allowed the release of covers. However, he concluded that such a law did not exist and would not apply to Haiducii, a Romanian citizen, as well as not to "Dragostea din tei", which had been ...
Japanese particles are written in hiragana in modern Japanese, though some of them also have kanji forms: (弖 or 天 for te て; 爾 for ni に; 乎 or 遠 for o を; and 波 for wa は).
"Si Tú Te Vas" (English: "If You Go Away") is a song by Spanish singer Enrique Iglesias from his 1995 eponymous debut studio album. The song was co-written by Iglesias when he was 16 and his friend Roberto Morales with Rafael Pérez-Botija handling its production. It was released as the lead single from the album in October 1995.
"Fuiste Tú" ("It was you") is a Latin pop song by Guatemalan recording artist Ricardo Arjona, released on 7 February 2012 as the second single from his thirteenth studio ...
TA-TU-TI scribe study tablet Artifact AD AO 5399 now found in the Louvre museum]. Old Babylonian period, c. 1800-1700 BC. Old Babylonian period, c. 1800-1700 BC. Instructional tablets for teaching scribes with the same text have been found all over Mesopotamia, in Nippur , and many other places.