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Pyramid inch – a unit of length, believed to be equal to 1 ⁄ 25 of the cubit; Rod; Sana lamjel; Spat – a unit of length equal to 1,000,000,000 km (620,000,000 mi) Stadion; Step; Unglie; Vara – an Aragonese, Spanish, and Portuguese unit [3] Yojana – a Vedic measure of distance used in ancient India. Its value was about 10 km (6.2 mi ...
"People in Love" is a song written by Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman that was first released by the British band 10cc on their 1977 album Deceptive Bends and as the third and final single from the album. The song reached No. 40 on the Billboard Hot 100 (their last Top 40 hit on that chart to date), [2] No. 74 in Australia and No. 90 in Canada.
3 8 78 — — 4 4 4 4 31 UK: Gold [11] AUS: Gold [12] CAN: Gold [13] Bloody Tourists: Released: September 1978; Label: Mercury Records; 3 3 74 12 58 2 2 4 3 69 CAN: Platinum [13] NED: Platinum [14] NZ: Platinum [15] Look Hear? Released: March 1980; Label: Mercury Records; 35 38 72 40 — 21 40 3 14 180 Ten Out of 10: Released: November 1981 ...
The album narrowly missed the Top 75 album chart in the UK (though it made No.66 in the Network chart – an alternative to the official chart). Two singles were released from the album. The first was "Woman in Love" backed with the non-album track "Man with a Mission".
ounce (avoirdupois) per cubic foot oz/ft 3: ≡ oz/ft 3: ≈ 1.001 153 961 kg/m 3: ounce (avoirdupois) per cubic inch oz/in 3: ≡ oz/in 3: ≈ 1.729 994 044 × 10 3 kg/m 3: ounce (avoirdupois) per gallon (imperial) oz/gal ≡ oz/gal ≈ 6.236 023 291 kg/m 3: ounce (avoirdupois) per gallon (US fluid) oz/gal ≡ oz/gal ≈ 7.489 151 707 kg/m 3 ...
How Dare You! is the fourth album by British band 10cc.Released in 1976, it included UK hit singles "I'm Mandy Fly Me" and "Art for Art's Sake". [3]The album was the band's third to have cover artwork by the Hipgnosis creative team.
The album version of "I'm Mandy Fly Me" features an intro in the form of one of the bridge sections of the band's 1974 song "Clockwork Creep". The section, whose lyrics are "Oh, no you'll never get me up in one of these again / 'Cause what goes up must come down", is rendered soft and tinny, as if heard playing from a portable transistor radio or an in-flight audio system.
"Rubber Bullets" was the band's first number one single in the UK Singles Chart, spending one week at the top in June 1973. [4] It also reached No. 1 in Ireland for 2 weeks and No. 3 in Australia, but it fared relatively poorly in the United States where it peaked at only No. 73, [5] and in Canada (their first appearance) where it reached just No. 76. [6]