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I Can Read Your Lips Song

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(Redirected from Read My Lips (song))
  1. How To Lip Read Easy
  2. Put Your Sweet Lips Song
  3. I Can Read Your Lips Song Lyrics

How To Lip Read Easy

Look up read my lips in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Lip reading is quite difficult to achieve, so we came up with a simpler solution. We capture a frame by frame recording of the 'correct' mouth shapes lined up with the music, and then when the user is playing the game, we compare the mouth shapes to the pre-recorded baseline. Measuring the shape of your mouth What is a mouth shape? Adobe premiere 2.0 free. How to logon to sap. Can you stand up? I do believe it's working, good That'll keep you going through the show Come on it's time to go There is no pain you are receding A distant ship, smoke on the horizon You are only coming through in waves Your lips move but I can't hear what you're saying When I was a child I caught a fleeting glimpse Out of the corner of my eye.

Upload image to sap. Read My Lips may refer to:

Film and television[edit]

  • Read My Lips (film) or Sur mes lèvres, a 2001 French film by Jacques Audiard
  • 'Read My Lips' (Batman: The Animated Series), a television episode

Music[edit]

Albums[edit]

  • Read My Lips (Jimmy Somerville album) or the title song (see below), 1989
  • Read My Lips (Melba Moore album) or the title song, 1985
  • Read My Lips (Sophie Ellis-Bextor album), 2001
  • Read My Lips (Tim Curry album), 1978
  • Read My Lips, by Fee Waybill, 1984

Songs[edit]

  • 'Read My Lips' (Alex Party song), 1996
  • 'Read My Lips' (Ciara song), 2013
  • 'Read My Lips' (Dottie West song), 1983; covered by Marie Osmond, 1986
  • 'Read My Lips' (Melissa song), 1991
  • 'Read My Lips (Enough Is Enough)', by Jimmy Somerville, 1989
  • 'Read My Lips', by Duran Duran from Liberty, 1990
  • 'Read My Lips', by Loverboy from Wildside, 1987
  • 'Read My Lips', by Inna and Farina, 2020

See also[edit]

  • 'Read my lips: no new taxes', a quote from George H. W. Bush at the 1988 Republican National Convention
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Read_My_Lips&oldid=982437282'

Also found in: Acronyms, Wikipedia.

read (one's) lips

1. Literally, to interpret and understand what one says by observing the shapes of the words they form with their lips. Even though I was speaking very softly, Jill could read my lips and knew exactly what I was saying.I can read your lips, but it will help me if you use sign language as well.
2. To pay close attention and listen very carefully to what one says. Usually said as an imperative. A: 'Come on, Mom—can I please go out with my friends?' B: 'Read my lips—N O means no!'Read my lips—finish your dinner now, or you won't be getting any dessert!

read my lips

slang Listen closely to what I'm going to say, because I am going to be very clear. A: 'Come on, Mom—can I please go out with my friends?' B: 'Read my lips—no!'
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2015 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

read my lips

Put Your Sweet Lips Song

Read
If you say read my lips, you mean that what you are saying is definitely the truth and people should believe and trust you. I said,`No way, read my lips, there is no way I'm going to sign this.'
Collins COBUILD Idioms Dictionary, 3rd ed. © HarperCollins Publishers 2012

I Can Read Your Lips Song Lyrics

read my lips

listen carefully (used to emphasize the importance of the speaker's words or the earnestness of their intent). North American informal
This expression was most famously used by the US Republican president George Bush in an election campaign pledge in 1988 : ‘Read my lips: no new taxes'.
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary © Farlex 2017

ˌread my ˈlips

(spoken) used to tell somebody to listen carefully to what you are saying: Read my lips: no new taxes (= I promise there will be no new taxes).
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary © Farlex 2017

Read my lips!

verb
See also: read
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

read my lips

Listen to what I'm saying because I really mean it. This expression actually has no relation to the lip-reading done by deaf persons who try to make out what is being said from the movement of a person's mouth. It dates from the mid-1900s. In 1978 it was used as the title of an album of songs by British actor and singer Tim Curry, who in turn picked up the phrase from an Italian-American recording engineer. But it was popularized by George H. W. Bush in his acceptance speech for the 1988 Republican presidential nomination: 'Congress will push me to raise taxes. . . . And I'll say to them, ‘Read my lips. No new taxes.'' It continued to be widely used in politics, sports, and indeed any venue where someone wanted to make an emphatic statement. It is well on its way to clichédom.
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer Copyright © 2013 by Christine Ammer
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