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| - Hail Mary, full of grace, Slap a chicken in the face. Hymns are those songs sung in the most boring way possible, in order to test your faith. If you fall asleep in the middle of "Gloria Deo Deo Deo Deo Deo Deo Deo Deo Deo", you are undoubtedly going to hell to have your toes eaten off by Mecha Hitler While not widely known among the public, scientist believe that most hymns (especially the more boring ones) can be attributed to Spider-man.
- Hymn was the smallest of the Colonies and the youngest. Hymn was nearly at 100 colonists before it was attacked and destroyed ruthlessly by Purist pigs. It did not even last a day.
- Hymn is a song found in Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Image Album Kakera-Musubi which is an image album for the Higurashi no Naku Koro ni Kai anime.
- Name: Hymn Run Time: 5:06 Written By: Vangelis Year: 1996
- Hymn – uroczysty utwór śpiewany, wychwalający jakąś osobę, kraj, szkołę, klub, czy też inne bóstwo – a może nawet radio.
- Virus.DOS.Hymn or Hymn is a memory resident parasitic encrypted virus that runs on MS-DOS. It has 4 variants:
* Virus.DOS.Hymn.1865 (A and B)
* Virus.DOS.Hymn.1962
* Virus.DOS.Hymn.2144
- 250px|right|thumb|Przykładowy hymn 250px|right|thumb|Hymn Polski Hymn - pieśń stosowana do wychwalania własnego kraju, narodu czy czego tam na wszystkich oficjalnych uroczystościach, takich, jak początek roku szkolnego, mecz podczas eliminacji mistrzostw w piłce nożnej czy (rzadziej) spotkania głów państw.
- A hymn was a type of song or poem written to praise a god. Some examples of hymns included "Amazing Grace" (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan) and "Jerusalem" (DS9: "Explorers") (the Christian God), as well as the Homeric Hymns (Greek gods) (TNG: "Darmok" ). The Bible also contained hymns in the book of Psalms, including Psalm 95. (TOS: "The Empath" )
- A derivative of the Latin hymnus, which comes from the Greek hymnos, derived from hydein, to sing. In ancient pagan literature hymnos designates a prize song to the gods or heroes Set to the accompaniment of the cythara (hymnoi men es tous theous poiountai, epainoi d'es anthropous, Arrian., IV, xi), at first written in the epic measure like the oldest hymn to the Delphic Apollo, later in distichs or in the refined lyric measures of Alcæus, Anacreon, and Pindar. In Christian literature the noun hymnos occurs in only two passages in the New Testament, namely Eph., v, 19, and Col., iii, 16, and then together with the synonyms psalmos and ode pneumatike. With these can be compared the verb hymnein in Matt., xxvi, 30; Mark, xiv, 26; Acts, xvi, 25; and Heb., ii, 12. Notwithstanding the many atte
- Ancient hymns include the Egyptian Great Hymn to the Aten, composed by Pharaoh Akhenaten; the Vedas, a collection of hymns in the tradition of Hinduism; and the Psalms, a collection of songs from Judaism. The Western tradition of hymnody begins with the Homeric Hymns, a collection of ancient Greek hymns, the oldest of which were written in the 7th century BC, praising deities of the ancient Greek religions. Surviving from the 3rd century BC is a collection of six literary hymns (Ὕμνοι) by the Alexandrian poet Callimachus.
- Hymns, like most music, can be classified into several distinct periods. The Late Neo-Georgian period is distinguished by the predominent use of latin vocals (and vocalists, such as Ricky Martin). The Neo-Classical and Classical periods are characterised by the excessively large wigs that performers are required to wear whilst singing. Take, for example, the popular Beethoven work, Oh God - the stage directions of which clearly state:
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