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As such, photographers would use the phrase say "cheese" to encourage subjects to state the word while the photographer snapped the photo. US astronauts Pete Conrad and Gordon Cooper after their safe return to Earth from the Gemini 5 mission in 1965. Pilot Conrad is jokingly instructing his commander Cooper to say cheese to the photographers.
Kadıköy is an older settlement than most of those on the Anatolian side of the city of Istanbul.Relics dating to 5500–3500 BC (Chalcolithic period) have been found at the Fikirtepe Mound, and articles of stone, bone, ceramic, jewelry and bronze show that there has been a continuous settlement since prehistoric times.
Say cheese is an instruction used by photographers who want their subject to smile. Say Cheese may refer to: Say Cheese (film), a 2009 Indian documentary "Say Cheese" (How I Met Your Mother), an episode of How I Met Your Mother; Say Cheese (novel), English title of the 1983 novel Скажи изюм by Russian writer Vasily Aksyonov
Taco Bell's Live Más Drive-Thru Cams will be available at five participating locations through Dec. 19. Here's when and where to find them.
A cover of Adam and the Ants' "Stand and Deliver" and an original song called "Say Cheese" were performed at the event. [8] On April 20, "Say Cheese" became the official theme song for NXT. [9] On June 8, Poppy returned to the show NXT and released the EP Eat (NXT Soundtrack) live, featuring "Eat
The slogan “Kids not exempted!” as well as the Panda Cheese slogan, “Never Say No To Panda” (in Egyptian Arabic), show up. In a second variant of the commercial, a father is playing catch with his son at the park. When his son throws the ball again, it lands in the panda's hands, much to the father's wife and daughter's shock.
Gluten-Free Mac & Cheese. $3.69. Good news for gluten-intolerant folks. Trader Joe's gluten-free mac is no longer "soupy and tasteless" thanks to a much-improved recipe, one commenter writes.
Kadikoi (Crimean Tatar: Qadıköy, Russian: Кадыкой) in the 19th century was a village on the Crimean peninsula, in Ukraine, about one mile north of Balaklava.The Battle of Balaclava (also known as the Battle of Kadikoi to Russian historians) was fought on the hills and valleys to the north of Kadikoi in 1854. [1]