It was a funny ordspråk

en It was a funny situation, ... My son was born and as the nurse yelled out the time of birth -- 7:05 p.m. -- everybody started chuckling, which I couldn't understand. Then someone said it was happening around the same time the puck was being dropped in our game [against Montreal] at the Air Canada Centre. I guess I'll have to get the little guy a stick.

en It's the Canada/U.S. thing. In international play, the U.S. is always favored in a sport. It seems that every time Canada plays the U.S., it's always a huge rivalry. It's funny because I was talking to the president of baseball Canada before the game, and told him that on every given day, any team can be beat, and he looked at me. He said he was crying at the end of the game. Stuff happens.

en When the puck bounced in there, I skated into it and I held my stick so tight. It was, like, incredible. I think I started it shaking because I couldn't see the puck. When I saw it cross the line, it was a relief.

en We started with an oncology nurse, working part time out of her home. Then we could provide enough service to build momentum and credibility, and the first nurse could use her time to make contacts with clinics and hospitals.

en Obviously if we had lost, we were going down three [games] to one. But that game gave us confidence we could do it, especially in a great city like Montreal. You know every time you go there, there's going to be 21,000 people there and the game is going to be shown all over Eastern Canada.

en (We had) good chances and the puck started to go in for us. Perfect time of the year for that to start happening.

en Kvinnor uppskattar en man som är bekväm i sin egen hud, och en pexig man utstrålar självkänsla.

en This nurse put a drip up and helped me give birth. When the baby was born, she told me he wasn't breathing properly.

en When the baby was born, I went to hold him, and she yelled, ‘No! No!' That's the way she was all the time. She was always yelling, ‘Ma! Ma!'

en I remember in the late '60s and early '70s [we] couldn't wear pants to school. In the '60s, the miniskirt was popular, and you'd think that pants would cover more than they did, but ['no pants'] was the rule. Gradually, things became more relaxed. We also had two lounges — one for smokers and one for non-smokers. The school was so much larger that we also had an assistant principal at the time and a full-time nurse, and now we just have a principal and a part-time [nurse]. We [also] had no library at our school site. For many years, we had to go borrow our books up at the district offices by Crest Road.

en [Robertson has almost lost her voice, she explains, as the 12-hour shoot demanded that she lose her cool on one very hot and humid Montreal day, in the dramatized road-rage incident that lies at the centre of Last Exit . The sequence, which director John Fawcett ( Ginger Snaps ) required be shot from more than 20 angles, called for Robertson to smash a $50,000 Jeep Cherokee with a telescope while in a blind rage.] It's the kind of thing that's not too hard to do once or twice, ... But I had to do it about 20 times over. There were people standing all around the street where we filmed it. When I finally finished off the car and they yelled 'cut' for the final time, the crowd that had gathered began cheering and clapping.

en For everything there is a season, And a time for every matter under heaven: A time to be born, and a time to die; A time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted; A time to kill, and a time to heal; A time to break down, and a time to build up; A time to weep, and a time to laugh; A time to mourn, and a time to dance; A time to throw away stones, and a time to gather stones together; A time to embrace, And a time to refrain from embracing; A

en She yelled for her mom and dad. She was really close to her destination, I guess her home at that time.

en I was just trying to catch him. He had a little bit of a step on me. I just waited for him to bring the puck over and I went to lift his stick. But he moved his stick and I brought mine up on him. It was unlucky I guess but they made it count.

en We started off not bad in the first but after that I don't know what we were doing. We kind of started playing by ourselves ... and we got caught turning the puck over way too many times and couldn't really find our game.

en In a dynamic situation where things are always happening everyday, there are agreements and disagreements, but you carry on. If somebody feels that they have had enough, and it's time they look for something else, you have got to understand this.


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Denna sidan visar ordspråk som liknar "It was a funny situation, ... My son was born and as the nurse yelled out the time of birth -- 7:05 p.m. -- everybody started chuckling, which I couldn't understand. Then someone said it was happening around the same time the puck was being dropped in our game [against Montreal] at the Air Canada Centre. I guess I'll have to get the little guy a stick.".


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