Happy Birt Ay
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So there you have it. You should be ready to wish someone a good birthday no matter where you find yourself and what kind of French speaker you find yourself with. Now you can feel confident to go up to your Francophone friends and family to wish them a very bon anniversaire.
\"Happy Birthday to You\", also known as \"Happy Birthday\", is a song traditionally sung to celebrate a person's birthday. According to the 1998 Guinness World Records, it is the most recognised song in the English language, followed by \"For He's a Jolly Good Fellow\". The song's base lyrics have been translated into at least 18 languages.[1] The melody of \"Happy Birthday to You\" comes from the song \"Good Morning to All\",[2] which has traditionally been attributed to American sisters Patty and Mildred J. Hill in 1893,[3][4] although the claim that the sisters composed the tune is disputed.[5]
It is traditional, among English-speakers, that at a birthday party, the song \"Happy Birthday to You\" be sung to the birthday person by the other guests celebrating the birthday, often when presented with a birthday cake. After the song is sung, party guests sometimes add wishes like \"and many more!\" expressing the hope that the birthday person will enjoy a long life. In the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, immediately after \"Happy Birthday\" has been sung, it is traditional for one of the guests to lead with \"Hip hip ...\" and then for all of the other guests to join in and say \"... hooray!\"[21] This cheer normally is given three times in a row.
The complete text of \"Happy Birthday to You\" first appeared in print as the final four lines of Edith Goodyear Alger's poem \"Roy's Birthday\", published in A Primer of Work and Play, copyrighted by D. C. Heath in 1901, with no reference to the words being sung.[27] The first book including \"Happy Birthday\" lyrics set to the tune of \"Good Morning to All\" that bears a date of publication is from 1911 in The Elementary Worker and His Work, but earlier references exist to a song called \"Happy Birthday to You\", including an article from 1901 in the Inland Educator and Indiana School Journal.[28] In 1924, Robert Coleman included \"Good Morning to All\" in a songbook with the birthday lyrics as a second verse. Coleman also published \"Happy Birthday\" in The American Hymnal in 1933. Children's Praise and Worship published the song in 1928, edited by Byers, Byrum, and Koglin.[citation needed]
In a 1998 episode of the television show Sports Night, \"Intellectual Property\", character Dan Rydell sings the song to his co-anchor during a telecast, forcing his network to pay royalties, and causing him to ask his colleagues to choose public-domain songs for him to sing for their birthdays.[60]
In the 1987 documentary Eyes on the Prize about the U.S. civil rights movement, there was a birthday party scene in which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s discouragement began to lift. After its initial release, the film was unavailable for sale or broadcast for many years because of the cost of clearing many copyrights, of which \"Happy Birthday to You\" was one. Grants in 2005 for copyright clearances[61] allowed PBS to rebroadcast the film.[62]
On August 5, 2013, the first anniversary of its landing on Mars, NASA's Curiosity rover celebrated its \"birthday\" when engineers at Goddard Space Flight Center used the Sample Analysis at Mars (SAM) instrument to cause the rover to \"sing\" Happy Birthday on the Martian surface.[65] 59ce067264
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