Inichord lagu For The Rest Of My Life - Maher Zain, kunci belajar gitar paling mudah dimainkan.
TheLyrics for Sepanjang Hidup - For the Rest of My Life Malay Version by Maher Zain have been translated into 2 languages. Aku bersyukur kau di sini kasih Di kalbuku mengiringi Dan padamu ingin ku sampaikan Kau cahaya hati Dulu ku palingkan diri dari cinta Hingga kau hadir ubah segalanya Oh inilah janjiku kepadamu Sepanjang hidup bersamamu Kesetiaanku
Forthe rest of my life I'll be with you G I'll stay by your side honest and true F Till the end of my time E E7 I'll be loving you. loving you Am For the rest of my life Thru days and night G I'll thank Allah for open my eyes F E E7 Now and for-ever I I'll be there for you [Verse] Am I know that deep in my heart G
Forthe rest of my life. Na na hey, oh. Na na hey, oh. Na na hey, oh. Na na hey, for the rest of my life. If I got one life to live, I'mma party 'til I'm dead. What the hell is a life worth living if it's not on the edge. Trying to keep my balance, I'm twisted so just in case I fall.
Forthe rest of my life. For the rest of my life. For the rest of my life. If I got one life to live. I'm a party 'til I'm dead. What the hell is a life worth living. If it's not on the edge. Tryna keep my balance I'm twisted. So just in case I fall.
Itseems like yesterday when she first said 'hello!' Funny how time flies by when you're in love It took us a lifetime to find each other It was worth the wait cause I finally found the one
. [Verse 1]Every day, I wake up next to an angelMore beautiful than words could sayThey said it wouldn't work but, what did they know?'Cause years have passed and we're still here today[Pre-Chorus]Never in my dreams did I think that this would happen to me[Chorus]As I stand here before my womanI canât fight back the tears in my eyesOh, how could I be so lucky?I must've done something rightAnd I promise to love her for the rest of my life[Verse 2]Seems like yesterday when she first said "hello"Funny how time flies when you're in loveIt took us a lifetime to find each otherIt was worth the wait 'cause I finally found the one[Pre-Chorus]Never in my dreams did I think that this would happen to me[Chorus]As I stand here before my womanI canât fight back the tears in my eyesOh, how could I be so lucky?I must've done something rightAnd I promise to love her for the rest of my life
JAKARTA, - The Chicks merupakan grup band country asal Amerika Serikat yang melantunkan lagu berjudul âNever Say Dieâ. Lagu berdurasi 3 menit 56 detik ini dimuat dalam album keempat mereka yang bertajuk Wide Open Spaces. Album yang berisikan 12 trek tersebut diproduseri oleh Blake Chancey dan Paul Worley, serta dirilis pada tahun 1998 melalui label Monument juga Lirik dan Chord Lagu Hole in My Head - The Chicks Berikut ini lirik dan chord lagu âNever Say Dieâ dari The Chicks Intro C F C F C FLying next to you in the dark DmI can feel your beating heart F CYou've been here beside me through the test of time FWe've both had our share of doubts DmWaited out those old storm clouds F G DmBoy, it's nights like these that I know why F CLovers like you and me, will never say die Chorus F G C'Cause there's a long line of folks giving up on love F G C GSo many hearts get broken in the push and shove Am FI'll believe in you for the rest of my life G C F CBaby, lovers like you and me, will never say die FTears of joy and tears of pain DmTears say more than words explain F CThere's no need for words here tonight FWe've both felt each other's power DmA tender touch in the wee small hours F G DmIs strong enough to hold us for a lifetime F CLovers like you and me, will never say die Chorus F G C'Cause there's a long line of folks giving up on love F G C GSo many hearts get broken in the push and shove Am FI'll believe in you for the rest of my life G CBaby, lovers like you and me, will never say die F G COh, lovers like you and me will never say die Outro F C F C F C Dapatkan update berita pilihan dan breaking news setiap hari dari Mari bergabung di Grup Telegram " News Update", caranya klik link kemudian join. Anda harus install aplikasi Telegram terlebih dulu di ponsel.
ï»żIt is close to a decade since she first started embracing the life of a professional athlete, but Republic of Ireland international Niamh Fahey hasn't ruled out the prospect of returning to a Gaelic football pitch at some point in the future. A TG4 All-Ireland SFC winner with her native Galway in 2004 under the tutelage of PJ Fahy, the Killannin woman switched regularly between inter-county ladies football and soccer before sealing a move to Womenâs Super League outfit Arsenal in 2008. She was naturally drawn to Gaelic sports, with her brothers Gary and Richie, as well as her distant cousin Kevin Walsh, having been part of the Galway menâs teams that won All-Ireland senior titles in 1998 and 2001. A young Niamh Fahey with the Sam Maguire Cup after her brother Gary captained Galway to the All-Ireland title in 2001 Despite eventually drifting away from the Tribeswomen upon joining forces with Arsenal, she kept one foot in the LGFA by lining out for the Parnellâs club in London - with whom she won an All-Ireland intermediate title in 2012. A transfer to Chelsea in the winter of 2014 saw her taking up soccer on a full-time basis for the first time, however, and she went on to spend a single season with Bordeaux in France before transferring to her current employers Liverpool in 2018. The 35-year-old doesnât have any grandiose plans for a potential comeback to ladies football, with plenty still left in the tank from a soccer perspective, but Killannin is a club that remains close to her heart. "Obviously if I go back home to Ireland, Iâd love to play with my club team again. Beyond that, I donât have many lofty ambitions past that, really. I would have always said, as the years go on, youâre still in the UK and youâre still playing professionally and at a high level. I try not to think too far down the line," Fahey acknowledged. "Iâm happy now with where Iâm at and if I ever do go back to Ireland of course Iâd like to kick around, but it will probably be the over I donât know what age category at that stage! Weâll see how my body is and all the rest of it." Niamh Fahey ahead of the international with Georgia in 2022 Although she has collected an astonishing 16 winnersâ medals across three different English clubs, Fahey will - all things going well - realise a long-held ambition later on this summer. A senior debutant for the Republic of Ireland as far back as March 2007, she picked up her 105th cap last October when the womenâs national team defeated Scotland in a crunch play-off encounter at Hampden Park in Glasgow to qualify for their first ever major tournament as the FIFA Womenâs World Cup that is set to get underway in Australia and New Zealand in a matter of weeks. A persistent injury saw her missing out on the three friendlies that Vera Pauwâs charges have played thus far in 2023, but Fahey returned to captain Liverpool in their final two games of the Womenâs Super League season. With Ireland set to face co-hosts Australia in front of 80,000 plus spectators on July 20 in Sydney, she will be doing everything within her power to ensure she makes Pauwâs final selection for the tournament later this month. "The whole reason I started playing in the first place was to be able to represent my country. Itâs the main reason as well that the desire to continue my career has been there. To always try and play for Ireland, and hopefully qualify for a major tournament. Weâve done that as well, so itâs a dream come through really. To be able to go down there and play in a World Cup for Ireland. "Theyâve had to move the fixture against Australia to a bigger capacity stadium because of the interest and the quick sell out. Thatâs really cool and obviously a massive occasion to be involved in the opening game against the hosts and everything else that comes with that. "I donât think anyone was unhappy when Australia was drawn out for the first game and for us to be versus Australia. I think everyone was definitely excited about that one." Having captained a Galway team that included future Ireland women's rugby international Claire Molloy to an All-Ireland minor football title in 2005, Faheyâs leadership skills were evident from a young age. The Galway native recently returned to captain Liverpool in their final two games of the Women's Super League season Her experience with Ireland made her an ideal candidate to take over as skipper of Liverpool FC Women in August 2020 and when the Reds claimed the English Championship at the end of the 2021/22 season, it was an added bonus on top of what was already a big honour for Fahey. "I was very proud to be made captain. Itâs a big responsibility, but thereâs a great dressing room of girls there as well. There was plenty of experience along the way and itâs definitely a collective effort. Itâs something Iâm very proud of, being a childhood Liverpool fan. To be able to captain the team is something really special." Between Laura Harvey, Shelly Kerr both Arsenal, Vicky Jepson Liverpool and Emma Hayes Chelsea at club level, and Sue Ronan and Pauw on the international stage, Fahey has become accustomed to playing under female managers in womenâs soccer. Her former team-mate Fiona Wynne has taken a similar step in ladies football with the Annaghdown stalwart currently serving as joint-manager alongside MĂĄghnus Breathnach of the Galway seniors. Following defeats to Kerry and Mayo in the Lidl NFL Division One and TG4 Connacht SFC finals respectively, they will be hoping to make a big impact in the Brendan Martin Cup with the westerners set to face Cork and Tipperary in Group 4 of the All-Ireland series over the next fortnight. As someone who still keeps a close eye on their progress, Fahey remains hopeful the current crop can match the heroics of her 2004 side. We need your consent to load this YouTube contentWe use YouTube to manage extra content that can set cookies on your device and collect data about your activity. Please review their details and accept them to load the Preferences "Iâve always kept an eye on the Galway ladies team. Iâm a big supporter of them as well. Weâve been close in recent years. Contested All-Irelands and league finals. It would be great to see Galway win another All-Ireland. Thereâs a lot of talent in the county as well. You never know," Fahey said. "The league final result wasnât great, it didnât go our way and a bit of a rocky start to the championship, but itâs a young team as well. Hopefully they can turn it around and you never know. Itâs a funny game at times. You hit form and anything can happen."Watch a provincial hurling final double-header on Sunday, Limerick v Clare and Kilkenny v Galway 4pm, follow a live blog on all matches on and the RTĂ News app or listen to updates throughout the day on Sunday Sport on RTĂ Radio 1
The Sam Maguire and the Liam MacCarthy cups were held aloft at the funeral mass in Glanmire, Co Cork of GAA star Teddy McCarthy. The former Cork player is the only man to ever win All-Ireland senior hurling and football medals in the same season. While he excelled as a sportsman and loved GAA, mourners were told that, prior to his death, Teddy dedicated most of his time to his "adored" grandchildren Joey and Tiernan. Mr McCarthy passed away suddenly last Tuesday, just a month shy of his 58th birthday. His sons Cian and Niall were among those who shouldered his coffin from the funeral home in Glanmire this morning to a hearse. Hundreds of people then lined the route and clapped as the cortege travelled to nearby St Joseph's Church for his requiem mass. His coffin was shouldered in to the church by famous Cork GAA names such as Larry Tompkins, Jimmy Barry Murphy, Billy Morgan, Dr Con Murphy, TomĂĄs Mulcahy and Niall Cahalane. In an emotional and often humurous tribute to his father, Cian McCarthy said Teddy had mellowed in the years before his death. "We joked about it at home," he said. "All his life he was so wound up because he sacrificed his life to GAA. When my two lads were born he really put time in to them, teaching them to play hurling and football. He would be giving out to me for giving out to them. "Myself and my brother Niall used to be slagging him saying 'if only he was like that when we were growing up'. It was great to see, because he really took pride in seeing his grandkids getting a kick out of playing games and carrying his legacy to another generation. Well, he was really proud of that. "There was an ongoing slagging. He would call down and he would be looking at Tiernan and saying 'greatness always skips a generation' and he would look over at me then. "Last Monday he came to our game to see us play and we went for a few pints after. It was a fitting day for all he stood for talking about the game; dissecting the game. He even told Niall he played well, which was another rarity! "We will drive on and stand tall, because that is what he did for us." Chief celebrant at the mass, Fr Pat Fogarty, said that Teddy had made the journey to Thurles last Sunday to watch the under 20 All-Ireland hurling final between Offaly and Cork. Cork won and there was "great joy and celebration" of the victory by Teddy and his pals, TomĂĄs Mulcahy and Jim Cashman. "Then on Monday evening Teddy was full of pride and joy and had a wonderful evening watching his two sons, Cian and Niall, representing Passage in the MacCurtain Centenary Cup and they were victorious. He was there with his family and his two adored grandchildren." Fr Fogarty said that a dark cloud had descended over the community when the death of Teddy was announced. He insisted that everyone immediately thought of the pain and suffering his family would experience following the loss of their loved one. Such was Teddy's fame in sporting circles that he was known by his first name and never needed a surname for people to establish his identity, Fr Fogarty said. However, he insisted that Teddy "wore his badge of fame lightly and never sought the limelight". Offertory gifts included the Sam Maguire and Liam MacCarthy cups, the jerseys of Sarsfields Hurling Club and Glanmire Football club, a hurley, a sliotar and a football, Cork jerseys, a picture of his late mother, Mary, a shirt representing his fondness for looking 'dapper, his two medals from the 1990 All-Ireland double and the jerseys he wore on those momentous occasions. Fr Fogarty added that GAA fans of a certain vintage could picture Teddy "soaring above the clouds, high in to the sky, fielding a football or else grabbing the small ball where other fellas wouldn't put their hurley". In his homily, family friend Fr Martin Barry said that Teddy was at mass as recently as last Sunday. He said that it was hard to imagine that he had passed away just two days later. "I would not rate myself to be a very strong and powerful man but, at the same time, I donât cry very easily," he said. "But I do admit to shedding a few tears when I heard that Teddy had died. He died in his sleep. At least he had a peaceful death. In Teddyâs hurling and football career, he was most noted for the spring in his step, and for the leap into the air to catch the sliotar or a football. "This was his greatest talent. The press described it in many different superlatives. I remember reading once that Teddy jumped into the clouds and brought the ball down with him. Now, if he jumped into the clouds, he was halfway to heaven. "And now Teddy has made a final leap in his life, and heâs leaped into heaven where he will be re-united with his mum and dad, Denis and Mary, and his brother and sister." The mass was attended by senior political figures, including TĂĄnaiste MicheĂĄl Martin, MEP and former GAA President Sean Kelly, Senator Jerry Buttimer, Colm Burke TD, and Lord Mayor of Cork Cllr Deirdre Forde. The funeral was also attended by Cmdt Claire Mortimer, Aide de Camp to Taoiseach Leo Varadkar, and by Captain Paul OâDonnell, Aide de Camp to President Michael D Higgins, Mr McCarthy was predeceased by his parents and two siblings. He is survived by his wife Oonagh, his children Cian, Niall, and Sinead, brothers Pat and Denis, sisters Breda, Philly and Mary, grandchildren, Tiernan and Joey, daughter-in-law, Ciara, mother-in-law, Phil, extended family and a large group of friends. He was laid to rest at Rathcooney Cemetery in Cork.
for the rest of my life lirik