Ah, the first pour of the day. Let me just tie on my apron, limber up the old tap-pulling arm... Ooh... eh... | |
All right, limber up, now. What's your mantra, soldier? | |
All right, well, I guess I'd better limber up. | |
Can't we just hang here for the first day you know, limber up by the pool? | |
Did you do anything this morning to limber up? | |
Ah, the first pour of the day. Let me just tie on my apron, limber up the old tap-pulling arm... Ooh... eh... | |
All right, limber up, now. What's your mantra, soldier? | |
All right, well, I guess I'd better limber up. | |
Can't we just hang here for the first day you know, limber up by the pool? | |
Did you do anything this morning to limber up? | |
- Yeah, I limbered up. | |
All limbered up? | |
And I want the roller limbered up for moving. | |
But keep them limbered up. | |
Is your fucking tongue limbered up enough yet? | |
A spot of limbering up accompanied by a weird and wheezy call from deep in his throat. | |
But on the Champs Elysees, the lights are bursting in bloom, the restaurant wines are growing cold, orchestras are limbering up their fingers, and women are putting perfume behind their ears. | |
He's just limbering up. | |
He's limbering up to implicate Rosie. | |
I put in my two bits worth, and used to walk him around the ring for the limbering up process under the watchful eye of Mrs. Howard, who never once lost faith. | |
- Yeah, I limbered up. | |
All limbered up? | |
And I want the roller limbered up for moving. | |
But keep them limbered up. | |
Is your fucking tongue limbered up enough yet? | |
A spot of limbering up accompanied by a weird and wheezy call from deep in his throat. | |
But on the Champs Elysees, the lights are bursting in bloom, the restaurant wines are growing cold, orchestras are limbering up their fingers, and women are putting perfume behind their ears. | |
He's just limbering up. | |
He's limbering up to implicate Rosie. | |
I put in my two bits worth, and used to walk him around the ring for the limbering up process under the watchful eye of Mrs. Howard, who never once lost faith. | |