"I Wanna Be Loved" is a popular song with music by Johnny Green and lyrics by Edward Heyman and Billy Rose, published in 1933.

The song is a standard, with many recorded versions.




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I Wanna Be Loved (Ricky Nelson song)

"I Wanna Be Loved" is a song written by Baker Knight and performed by Ricky Nelson. The song reached #20 on the Billboard Hot 100 and #30 in the UK in 1959. The single's B-side, "Mighty Good", reached #38 on the Billboard Hot 100.

References

Séd

Séd is a river in western Hungary, north of Lake Balaton. It is 70 kilometres long and flows through the city of Veszprém. It flows into Sárvíz.

Coordinates: 47°09′06″N 18°20′58″E / 47.15167°N 18.34944°E / 47.15167; 18.34944

SD

SD may refer to:

  • SD (rapper), is a rapper from Chicago
  • Sekolah Dasar, an Indonesian junior school
  • Sindhi language's ISO 639-1 code
  • Sisters of the Destitute, a Syro-Malabar Catholic women's order
  • Southern Cross Decoration (SD), a South African military award
  • Spasmodic dysphonia
  • Storm Data, an NOAA publication summarizing severe weather events in the United States
  • Sudan Airways' IATA airline designator
  • Super deformed
  • Secure Digital memory cards
  • Sustainable development
  • Standard Deviation
  • Organizations

  • Sicherheitsdienst, the intelligence service of the Nazi SS
  • Sinistra Democratica or Democratic Left, an Italian political party
  • Social Democrats (Slovenia), a left-wing Slovenian political party
  • Stronnictwo Demokratyczne, Democratic Party, a defunct Polish party
  • Sweden Democrats, a right wing party in Sweden
  • Swiss Democrats or Schweizer Demokraten, a right-wing political party in Switzerland
  • Places

  • San Diego
  • South Dakota, United States postal abbreviation
  • Sudan's ISO country code
  • Science and technology

    Aos Sí

    The aos sí, "ace shee", older form aes sídhe [eːs ˈʃiːðʲə]), "ays sheeth-uh") is the Irish term for a supernatural race in Irish mythology and Scottish mythology (usually spelled Sìth, however pronounced the same), comparable to the fairies or elves. They are said to live underground in fairy mounds, across the western sea, or in an invisible world that coexists with the world of humans. This world is described in the Book of Invasions (recorded in the Book of Leinster) as a parallel universe in which the aos sí walk amongst the living. In the Irish language, aos sí means "people of the mounds" (the mounds are known in Irish as "the sídhe"). In Irish literature the people of the mounds are also called daoine sídhe [ˈdiːnʲə ˈʃiːə]; in Scottish mythology they are daoine sìth. They are variously said to be the ancestors, the spirits of nature, or goddesses and gods.

    Some secondary and tertiary sources, including well-known and influential authors such as W.B. Yeats, refer to aos sí simply as "the sídhe" (lit. "mounds").

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