Provided to YouTube by Kontor New Media GmbH4 o'Clock (In the Morning) (Original Radio Version) · Lazard4 o'Clock (In the Morning)℗ Pulsive Trance Recordings
Four o'clock in the morning and the two is on the ground Four o'clock in the morning, there's a mist that's all around As the time that I like best to walk around about the town And I rave onto the morning for the solid tune I've found Four o'clock in the morning, I can dig into my mind Four o'clock in the morning, I'm surprised that war I find
From one second after midnight (12:00:01) until twelve o'clock noon is considered to be morning and is shown by adding A.M. (ante meridiem) to a time. Examples: 3:32 A.M. (three thirty-two AM) or three thirty-two in the morning. From one second after Noon until twelve-o'clock midnight is indicated by P.M. (post meridiem) after the time.
Three O'Clock in the Morning" is a waltz composed by Julián Robledo that was extremely popular in the 1920s. Robledo published the music as a piano solo in 1919, and two years later Dorothy Terriss wrote the lyrics. Paul Whiteman's instrumental recording in 1922 became one of the first 20 recordings in history to sell over 1 million copies.
If you have a set phrase, you can leave out the o'clock but do not need to. There are also set phrases like on the dot or sharp to emphasize that the event will happen at the exact time stated. For example. It's 4 in the afternoon (16:00) It's 3 o'clock (3:00 or 15:00 depending on context) It's 7 o'clock in the morning (7:00)
Three o'clock in the morning baby. And I can't even close my eyes. Can't find my baby. And I can't be satisfied. I've looked around me. And my baby she can't be found. I've looked all around me
4 O'Clock in the Morning Lyrics. Four o'clock in the morning and the two is on the ground. Four o'clock in the morning, there's a mist that's all around. As the time that I like best to walk
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lyrics 4 o clock in the morning