Infinite may refer to:
"Infinite..." is the second single by Japanese singer Beni Arashiro. It served as the outro theme for TBS's "Count Down TV" in October 2004.
Oricon Sales Chart (Japan)
Infinite is the eighth studio album by power metal band Stratovarius, released on 28 February 2000 through Nuclear Blast (Europe) and Victor Entertainment (Japan). The album reached No. 1 on the Finnish albums chart and remained on that chart for nine weeks, as well as reaching the top 100 in six other countries. "Hunting High and Low" and "A Million Light Years Away" were released as singles, reaching No. 4 and 14 respectively on the Finnish singles chart.Infinite was certified Platinum in June 2013, with 21,907 copies sold.
Four bonus tracks were made available for different international editions: "Why Are We Here?", "It's a Mystery", "What Can I Say?" and "Keep The Flame", all of which were later released on the band's 2001 compilation album Intermission.
Sire is a form of address for reigning kings in the United Kingdom and in Belgium. It has also been used in France, Italy, Germany, Portugal, Sweden and Spain. Historically Sire had a wider usage. During the Middle Ages, Sire was generally used to address a superior, a person of importance or in a position of authority or the nobility in general. The word "sire" and the French "(mon)sieur" share a common etymologic origin, both ultimately being related to the Latin senior.
Sire may refer to:
In the Middle Ages, a childe or child [Old English Cild > "Young Lord"] was the son of a nobleman who had not yet attained knighthood, or had not yet won his spurs. As a rank in chivalry, it was used as a title, e.g. Child Horn in King Horn, as a male progressed through the positions of squire and then knight.
The term is now obsolete, but is still well known from poetry, such as Robert Browning's Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came and Lord Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage.
In the local dialect of North East Scotland known as Doric a Childe (pronounced cheeil) is the name used that may be directly translated as chap or fellow or man in English . For example a working childe was a working man or chap . A dour childe is dour fellow for example.
The term is used to apply to an expected next stage in human evolution in the Childe Cycle novels by Gordon R. Dickson.
Childe in Stephen King's The Dark Tower is, in Roland Deschain's own words, "...a term that describes a knight - or a gunslinger - on a quest. A formal term, and ancient. We never used it among ourselves...for it means holy, chosen by ka. We never liked to think of ourselves in such terms, and I haven't thought of myself so in many years." (p. 859, The Dark Tower VII: The Dark Tower, Pocket Books, 2006 ed.)
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your dominant hand up high
With your dominant hand in the sky.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your hand up for sex
For me and me helmet and wherever it winds up next.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your hand up for our queen
For shagging five birds in the back of me limousine.
I felt particularly in tune with the cosmos
I feel in tune with it tonight.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your hand up for love
While snogging down South while jiggling upper grub.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your dominant hand up high
Put your dominant hand . . .
Tonight!
Unity!
Oi oi!
Unity, love.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your hand up for tea
For separation of church and state and me.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your dominant hand up high
Put your dominant leg . . .
I felt particularly in tune with the cosmos
I feel in tune with it tonight.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put your hand up for bad teeth
For sixteen [unintelligible] grief.
Yeah yeah (yeah yeah)
Oi oi (oi oi)
Put you dominant hand up high