"Lose It" is a song by Britpop band Supergrass. It was released as a single from their debut album I Should Coco. Officially, it is the third single taken from the album. However, it was a vinyl-only US release on Sub Pop Records. Only 2,500 copies were originally pressed in 1995, making it somewhat of a rarity, but it is believed more copies have been pressed in the following years. On the strength of imports, it reached #75 in the UK singles chart in 1995.
7" SP281
The video for "Lose It" is featured exclusively in the extras section on the Supergrass is 10 DVD.
As well as there being a music video for "Lose It", there was a video for the acoustic version of Caught by the Fuzz. This was filmed in the same fashion as the original Caught by the Fuzz music video except using different footage, and with the addition of some scenes of Morris dancers.
"Lose It" is a single by the five-piece American pop-rock band Cartel, recorded for the MTV show Band in a Bubble. This was the first song recorded by Cartel while they spent 20 days recording a new album in a glass bubble. It was released as the group's first single from their self-titled second album Cartel, on June 12, 2007. The song featured female vocalist Juliet Simms of the band Automatic Loveletter and the ringtone reflected her portion of the song although her vocals were removed from the video.
"Lose It" was originally written as the first track for the new album and was performed live from the bands studio on June 1, 2007 for TRL's Spankin' New Music Week. The Cartel album was released on August 21, 2007. The "Lose It" single became available on iTunes and Napster on June 12, 2007, the same day Cartel was released from the bubble.
In mathematics, an ordered pair (a, b) is a pair of mathematical objects. The order in which the objects appear in the pair is significant: the ordered pair (a, b) is different from the ordered pair (b, a) unless a = b. (In contrast, the unordered pair {a, b} equals the unordered pair {b, a}.)
Ordered pairs are also called 2-tuples, or sequences of length 2; ordered pairs of scalars are also called 2-dimensional vectors. The entries of an ordered pair can be other ordered pairs, enabling the recursive definition of ordered n-tuples (ordered lists of n objects). For example, the ordered triple (a,b,c) can be defined as (a, (b,c)), i.e., as one pair nested in another.
In the ordered pair (a, b), the object a is called the first entry, and the object b the second entry of the pair. Alternatively, the objects are called the first and second coordinates, or the left and right projections of the ordered pair.
Cartesian products and binary relations (and hence functions) are defined in terms of ordered pairs.
A&B may refer to:
AB, Ab, or ab may refer to: