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| - You drop on your knees and put your hands behind your head. The man in the black trench coat lowers his gun an he opens up a very small lower part of his coat and puts his gun on his hip. It looks like he is wearing nothing under his trench coat. He then grabs your neck and then twists it.
- The icon for the emote shows the player standing still, waving a white flag. White flags are known across the world to indicate a surrender, truce, or a desire to parley.
- Surrender is a song written and recorded by Cheap Trick from their third album Heaven Tonight (1978)
- Surrender is the 9th episode of Season 3 and is the 53rd episode overall.
- Surrender is the 1st quest of Act 1 Chapter 1.
- A rock song from Cheap Trick's hippie days. It was declared the national anthem of France.
- when i could see every tiny grain of earth and every leaf on every tree and worms between, and birds on branches a full 360 degrees optically - around my head all at once. some teacher had said to "look at your hands" when seemingly such psychic visions she said "the soul is trying to leave the body." well, i dunno bout anyone else, but i SAW it all - all at once. vision curtailed by near-sightedness i have never known yet how that was possible. vcoo Here is a place to collaborate. Visit our Peace Poets as well. Return to Main Page
- Surrender is the 12th episode of the 7th season of "E.R."
- Emily przygotowuje się do swojego ślubu i ostatecznej rozgrywki, ale Graysonowie utrudniają sprawy, wymykając się spod jej kontroli.
- "Surrender" is a song by American pop rock band Cheap Trick. It was mentioned in the Season Eleven episode, "Guitar Queer-O".
- Surrender is an option in combat in the Heroes of Might and Magic games, and involves paying your enemy to get your hero and their troops back to a friendly town. The surrender must be accepted by the enemy player.
- Another version of this song called "Surrender (Remix)". This remix is on the EP Stomping The Phantom Brake Pedal released on December 18, 2012.
- Name: Surrender Run Time: 3:53 Year: 1982
* Surrender (Single)
- Surrender is an ability available to the Smuggler at level 24. It causes the smuggler's threat level to drop towards all currently engaged enemies. It costs no energy, is instant cast and has a 30 second cooldown.
- "Surrender" is the eleventh episode of the lion series of Voltron: Defender of the Universe.
- Surrendering is often informally known as scooping, because after surrendering a player "scoops" up all of their cards and shuffles them back together in preparation for the next Duel. Surrendering can be used strategically in a Match if it would not result in a Match loss. For example, if the player wants to conceal specific cards or their overall Deck theme from their opponent but is very unlikely to win from their current position, surrendering would prevent the possibility of the opponent finding out.
- In 2285, Commander Uhura hailed the heavily damaged USS Reliant and under orders from Admiral James T. Kirk, told Khan Noonien Singh to surrender and prepare to be boarded. (Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan) In 2287, Commander Pavel Chekov advised Sybok to surrender himself to USS Enterprise-A personnel on Nimbus III. (Star Trek V: The Final Frontier) In 2364, Captain Jean-Luc Picard ordered Counselor Deanna Troi to surrender in all languages and frequencies to Q while on the battle bridge of the USS Enterprise-D. (TNG: "Encounter at Farpoint" )
- Surrender is the last resort for a badly beaten team. Using it removes the player from actively playing, which means you will surrender and your opponent will win (unless there are still two or more teams remaining). Surrendering doesn't necessarily give back anything if used, which makes it practically the same as losing a match, except that you don't have to finish it. There are seven outcomes of the Surrender, they differ between games.
- "Surrender" is a Cheap Trick song originally released on January 30, 1978 on the album Heaven Tonight. It is also featured on the live album At Budokan. It is a late 1970s teen anthem, describing the relations between the baby boomer narrator and his G.I. generation parents. The narrator describes how his parents are weirder and hipper than many children would believe. For example, the narrator describes how he discovers his parents "rolling on the couch" and listening to his Kiss records late at night. It is ranked #465 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of "the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time". Cheap Trick still performs this song, and Rick Nielsen often actually throws vinyl Kiss records to the audience in live performances at the moment Kiss is mentioned in the song.
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