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The Very Thought of You is a 1944 romantic drama film directed by Delmer Daves and starring Dennis Morgan, Eleanor Parker and Dane Clark. [2] The screenplay focuses on a couple who knew each other when he was in college. They meet by chance, fall in love and marry while he is on a short Thanksgiving leave before starting special training.
Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence (released in the United States as The Very Thought of You) is a 1998 British romantic comedy directed by Nick Hamm and starring Monica Potter and Joseph Fiennes. The screenplay by Peter Morgan focuses on the chance meeting each of three childhood friends now living in London has with an American tourist.
The Very Thought of You is a 2009 novel by film producer Rosie Alison. Set on the brink of World War II , the novel centres on eight-year-old Anna Sands, a child relocated to a Yorkshire estate. She is quickly drawn into the lives of the couple who have set up their estate as a school.
"The Very Thought of You" is a pop standard that was recorded and published in 1934 with music and lyrics by Ray Noble. The song was first recorded by Ray Noble and His Orchestra with Al Bowlly on vocals for HMV in England in April 1934.
The Very Thought of You may also refer to: The Very Thought of You, a 1944 film starring Dennis Morgan and Eleanor Parker; The Very Thought of You or Martha, Meet Frank, Daniel and Laurence, a British romantic comedy; The Very Thought of You (Emilie-Claire Barlow album), 2007; The Very Thought of You (Nat King Cole album), 1958
A computer algebra system (CAS) is a software product designed for manipulation of mathematical formulae.The principal objective of a computer algebra system is to systematize monotonous and sometimes problematic algebraic manipulation tasks.
Instead of showing the math behind the answer, the student took "showing your thinking" very literally and drew his sad face on a stickman who raises a hand to its forehead and pops out a ...
In model theory, a branch of mathematical logic, the diagram of a structure is a simple but powerful concept for proving useful properties of a theory, for example the amalgamation property and the joint embedding property, among others.