Naked most commonly refers to the state of nudity.
Naked may also refer to:
Naked, published in 1997, is a collection of essays by American humorist David Sedaris. The book details Sedaris’ life, from his unusual upbringing in the suburbs of Raleigh, North Carolina, to his booze-and-drug-ridden college years, to his Kerouacian wandering as a young adult. The book became a best-seller and was acclaimed for its wit, dark humor and irreverent tackling of tragic events, including the death of Sedaris’ mother. Prior to publication, several of the essays were read by the author on the Public Radio International program This American Life.
Naked won the Randy Shilts Award for Gay Non-Fiction from Publishing Triangle in 1998.
About the early life of the Sedaris family and David's hopes to one day be rich and famous. It's revealed that the family is actually middle class.
A description of David's obsessive-compulsive and Tourettes symptoms as a child, which include licking light switches and kissing newspapers, frequently get him in trouble at school and are abandoned when he starts smoking.
Revolution is the title of the tenth album by The Dubliners. It was their second to be produced by Phil Coulter. This was a landmark in their career. Their sound had developed and Coulter, as well as playing piano on the record, had brought in other instrumentalists as well. The album featured "Scorn Not His Simplicity", a song that Coulter had composed about his own son, who had Down's syndrome, as well as a poem penned by Luke Kelly entitled "For What Died The Sons Of Róisín?".
Revolution is a software development environment/multimedia authoring software in the tradition of HyperCard and is based on the MetaCard engine. Its primary focus is on providing a relatively accessible development tool set and scripting language that enable the creation of software programs that run across multiple platforms with little or no code modifications. The Integrated Development Environment (IDE) included with Revolution is built partly on the models created by Bill Atkinson and the original HyperCard team at Apple and subsequently followed by many other software development products, such as Microsoft's Visual Basic. Revolution includes an English language-like scripting language called Transcript, a full programming language superset of the HyperCard's scripting language, HyperTalk.
The higher-grade versions (see Versions, below), allow applications to be compiled to run on more than one platform, including Macintosh (Classic or Mac OS 9, and Mac OS X), Windows and Unix-like systems including Linux. It can also import HyperCard stacks, which require little or no modification unless they use external functions, which generally do not work in Revolution.
The Revolution was a newspaper established by women's rights activists Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton in New York City. It was published weekly between January 8, 1868 and February 17, 1872. With a combative style that matched its name, it primarily focused on women's rights, especially suffrage for women. It also covered other topics, however, such as politics, the labor movement and finance. Anthony managed the business aspects of the paper while Stanton was co-editor along with Parker Pillsbury, an abolitionist and a supporter of women's rights.
Initial funding was provided by George Francis Train, a controversial businessman who supported women's rights but alienated many activists with his views on politics and race. The funding that he arranged was enough to start the newspaper but not enough to sustain it. After twenty-nine months, mounting debts forced Anthony to transfer the paper to Laura Curtis Bullard, a wealthy women's rights activist who gave it a less radical tone. The paper published its last issue less than two years later.
Start was a short-lived daily tabloid published in Belgrade between late 2005 and early 2006.
After the commercial failure of his Ekipa sports daily, Radisav Rodić, owner of Kurir and Glas javnosti dailies, decided to give Start a try in late 2005. The first issue hit the stands on November 1, 2005.
Resembling Kurir in many ways, many wondered about the commercial reasoning behind a launch of yet another tabloid (admittedly, a little less sensationalist) in the highly saturated Serbian daily newspaper media market.
Edited by Milka Ljubičić, in addition to running the usual political, culturual, life, and social sections, Start tried to compete by offering expanded sports coverage, something that most Serbian tabloids don't do. However, it couldn't keep up and the January 24, 2006 issue turned out to be its last.
Start (Russian: Старт) is a professional bandy club from Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, established in 1932. It plays in the Russian Bandy Super League, the top division of Russian bandy.
Start was founded in 1932 as a team called Novoye Sormovo. The name was changed to Zenit (Zenith) in 1936, Trud (Labor) in 1959 and ultimately Start Gorky in 1960. When the city of Gorky changed its names to Nizhny Novgorod in 1990, the club changed names accordingly. It played in the elite division of the Soviet bandy championship in 1967-1969, the 1973-74 season and permanently since the 1975-76 season.
Start's second team Start-2 plays in the Russian Bandy Supreme League, the second tier of Russian bandy.
Seventy seven million dollars made
From watchin' me cum under the sun
Under my vacation
Shootin' my jizzy jizzum, the woody
Has rissy rizen
I ain't gettin' paid to entertain your birthday showers
Rockin' my porno tape for hours and hours
Clitoris's are fearin' me it's bigger than Ron Jeremy
'Cause it's them ass cheeks, that make my ass weak
And I've been runnin' with the blue balls since last week
And if you ask me, I'll be glad to speak until we get butt naked
And break it down with Nasty
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot
Get, get naked
Ride the cock till you hit the spot
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot
Get naked
Roof roof, doin' it doggy style
Bow wow wow yippy yo yippy yay
Bow wow wow yippy yo yippy yay
Bow wow wow yippy yo yippy yay
Bow wow wow yippy yo yippy
The little Geisha hoe from Tokyo, aho said she could blow
Ten dollas love me long time in a limo, for really doh
I'm just try in to fly with the flows, freak up some hoes
Blow up the shows, make a little dough
As if you didn't know back to the strip club
Freakin' up some ho ho's
Swingin' my ding-a-ling it ain't no thing
It's those intergalactic ho's who come down
In those space probes five green hyenas
Representin' with no clothes
Mix Master Mike, Mix Master Mike
Makin' the pussy tight
No jimmy no gimme no lust
In the methods of mayhem we trust
It's a must so rip off yer clothes and expose yer bust
'Cause it's them ass cheeks, that make my ass weak
And I've been runnin' with the blue balls since last week
And if you ask me, I'll be glad to speak until we get butt naked
And break it down with nasty
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot
Get, get naked
Ride the cock till you hit the spot
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot
Get naked
You only love me when you want punanny
Queen bitch, red lipstick
The all black harlot call me black Barbie
Fuck a blow job, it's a motherfuckin' hobbie
Under 7 inches, aye sorry
Minute men, I can't fuck wit them
I like to ride the cock till you hit the spot
Uhh, come on baby make it hot
Got a Convertible, drop the top
Before we do a thing, I want the diamonds and the rings
The furs, the minks, the jewels, the links
You know I'm freaky, so ya got to eat me
And I know you hate it but, uh
Get naked
You ain't lickin' this
You ain't stickin' this, we don't want the dick
Fuck the cunt games, you girls can't complain
And I ain't leavin' til you're sleepin' on the cum stains
You ain't lickin' this
You ain't stickin' this, we don't want the dick
Fuck the cunt games, you girls can't complain
And I ain't leavin' til you're sleepin' on the cum stains
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot
Get, get naked
Ride the cock till you hit the spot
Get, get naked
Come on baby make it hot