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Omam may refer to: Of Mice and Men, a 1937 novella by John Steinbeck. Trachyspermum ammi, a plant; Of Monsters and Men, an Icelandic band; Omam, Iran, a village
“This is a thing called a present. The whole thing starts with a box.” “Just a box with bright-colored paper. And the whole thing’s topped with a bow.”
Candy is a 2006 Australian romantic drama film, adapted from Luke Davies's 1998 novel Candy: A Novel of Love and Addiction. Candy was directed by filmmaker Neil Armfield and stars Heath Ledger, Abbie Cornish and Geoffrey Rush. Candy, produced by Margaret Fink, was released in Australia on 25 May 2006 and subsequently released worldwide.
Because most computer keyboards lack keys to enter typographic quotation marks directly, much that is written using word-processing programs has vertical quotation marks. The "smart quotes" feature in some computer software can convert vertical quotation marks to curly ones, although sometimes imperfectly.
Candy Box! is an incremental online text-based role-playing game that runs in web browser. It was developed by a 19-year-old French student using the pseudonym "aniwey" and released in April 2013. Candy Box! uses ASCII art for the visuals. A sequel, Candy Box 2 was released on October 24, 2013.
It plays a central role as a key race car sponsor in Cars, and made a small cameo in WALL-E. [45] The company's logo is a dinosaur, but with a Brontosaurus in Toy Story and a Tyrannosaurus in Cars (a reference to Sinclair Oil , which uses a similar dinosaur logo; the name, however, is similar to Sunoco , the current oil and gasoline sponsor of ...
"Candy" is the debut single by Brazilian-born British-based rapper Aggro Santos. The song was produced by Quiz & Larossi and co-written by Aggro Santos, Josef Larossi, Andreas Romdhane, Viktoria Hansen, while also featuring American singer Kimberly Wyatt of The Pussycat Dolls .
"Candy" is a song from Iggy Pop's ninth solo album, Brick by Brick. A duet with Kate Pierson of the B-52's , it was the album's second single , in September 1990. [ 1 ] It became the biggest mainstream hit of Pop's career, as he reached the top 40 in the United States for the first and only time.