Who Sings 'They Said That The World Was Built For Two'?

2026-04-08 13:27:19 108
ABO Personality Quiz
Take a quick quiz to find out whether you‘re Alpha, Beta, or Omega.
Scent
Personality
Ideal Love Pattern
Secret Desire
Your Dark Side
Start Test

2 Answers

Elias
Elias
2026-04-10 07:35:27
Oh, that’s The Postal Service! Their song 'Such Great Heights' is my go-to for road trips when the sky looks like cotton candy. The way the synth pops and the lyrics tumble out—it’s like they bottled the feeling of young love and wired it into a drum machine. I’ve had friends argue it’s overplayed, but I’ll defend it forever. There’s a reason it pops up in movies and ads; it’s the musical equivalent of finding an old mixtape in your glove compartment and smiling before you even press play.
Jack
Jack
2026-04-12 02:00:48
That hauntingly beautiful line 'they said the world was built for two' comes from 'Everybody Wants to Rule the World'—but wait, no! I totally blanked for a second. It’s actually from 'Video Killed the Radio Star' by The Buggles, right? facepalm Nope, still wrong! After scrambling to my playlist, I realized it’s from 'Such Great Heights' by The Postal Service. Their 2003 indie-electronic gem has this dreamy, nostalgic vibe that makes you want to slow-dance alone in your room. The way Ben Gibbard’s voice wraps around those lyrics feels like a warm hug from someone you haven’t seen in years. Fun side note: Iron & Wine’s acoustic cover of it for the 'Garden State' soundtrack is equally magical—whispers and fingerpicking turned the synth-pop original into something you’d hear in a rustic cabin at dawn.

Speaking of covers, I once fell down a rabbit hole of 'Such Great Heights' versions. There’s a ukulele cover by some college students that went viral, a jazz lounge reinterpretation with scatting (weird but charming), and even a punk band that sped it up to double time. The original still wins for me, though. That lyric specifically captures that universal ache for connection—like the universe conspired to make everything feel small enough for just two people. Makes me wonder if the songwriters were thinking about a specific person or just the idea of love itself. Either way, it’s one of those lines that sticks to your ribs.
View All Answers
Scan code to download App

Related Books

Who said Paris was the Goddess of love?
Who said Paris was the Goddess of love?
Judith suddenly inherits a magnificent big house. Fearing loneliness, she looks for friends to spicy her life. She attracts them easily and then, she places a small ad on the Internet looking for a fifth roommate. What if things got complicated again? Judith does not like simplicity, and that is the least you could say!
10
|
9 Chapters
Built For Sin
Built For Sin
CAUTION: This is an R18 EROTIC DARK ROMANCE COLLECTION containing multiple RAW LGBTQIA+ STEAMY STORIES. Built For Sin will meet you dry and hand you imagination to leave you soaking wet, hard as diamond and rutting like an Alpha. Clicking on read will take you on a journey to either press your thighs together or use a vibrator; suffer in hard silence or stroke your hard dick faster with lubricant. Since you read everything above and are still reading, I guess you want to volunteer as tribute to this world of perversion. Welcome, sinner.
10
|
12 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More
BUILT FOR HIM
BUILT FOR HIM
"Orion, My chest aches 😭😭. "Let me help you uncle" said Orion A nephew obsessed with his simple Uncle. NB: non incest.
Not enough ratings
|
6 Chapters
Hot Chapters
More
They Said They're The Murderers
They Said They're The Murderers
The prettiest girl in our class, Mandy Smith, died unexpectedly in our dorm. When the police took statements, my two other roommates and I pleaded guilty. I took out Mandy’s love letter to my boyfriend. “I killed her because she was seducing my boyfriend.” Anna Anderson took out a purchase history for cyanide. “I killed her because she snatched my overseas studies spot from me.” Fiona Lee took out an expulsion letter. “I killed her because she reported me for cheating.” All three of us hated Mandy. However, the police found that all of us had alibis during Mandy’s time of death. The counselor also asked us to stop lying. However, the three of us sneered. “Whether you believe it or not, one of us is the murderer.”
|
8 Chapters
The Silenced Songbird Sings Again
The Silenced Songbird Sings Again
Seven years ago, my father's adopted daughter, my adopted sister Sophia, caused a hit-and-run while drunk driving. My parents and even my own biological sister tried to persuade me to be her scapegoat. "Sophia's health is fragile. She can't survive prison. Could you take the fall for her?" I refused. However, one night, in the dead of darkness, they handed me over to the police themselves, personally escorting me into the back of a squad car. My fiancé, Salvatore Vitale, the most powerful mafia Don in all of Sicelia, had arranged everything. "Irene," he told me, his voice calm and absolute, "when you get out, I'll marry you. Just endure these seven years." Just like that, the people who were supposed to love me the most, my family and the man I was meant to marry, joined forces to abandon me. I became a criminal without ever committing a crime.
|
22 Chapters
The “Useless Parent” Who Built a Kindergarten
The “Useless Parent” Who Built a Kindergarten
I donated 45 million to the city's best kindergarten, but my daughter failed the enrollment interview. She was a polymath. Furious, I demanded an explanation from admissions. She hurled an assessment file at my face. "Your daughter's brilliant, but you're the exact opposite! You're dead last among the parents!" She continued, "The others have tech domes! You're nothing but a regular Ivy League graduate! Your degree's worth about as much as toilet paper!" The other teachers laughed as well. "If we admit her daughter, it's going to look bad on the other kids. She can't take that responsibility." "Yeah, I can't believe she's demanding an explanation from Ms. Johnson. Her husband is the kindergarten's biggest stakeholder. He can make sure her daughter has nowhere to go." The admission teacher shoved me away. With disdain in her eyes, she said, "Out of my sight if you know what's good for you. My husband is picking me up in his Rolls-Royce. His car plate alone is worth more than your life! It's lucky 777! Only one in Georgeport!" Three sevens? That was my husband's car. I laughed mirthlessly and texted my husband. "I had no idea you had another wife behind me."
|
9 Chapters

Related Questions

Which Big World Stories Analyze The Psychological Trauma And Redemption Of Tragic CPs?

1 Answers2025-11-18 03:34:22
some stories absolutely wreck me in the best way. 'Attack on Titan' has this haunting Levi/Erwin dynamic where survivor’s guilt and unspoken devotion intertwine. The best fics don’t just skim the surface—they dissect Erwin’s obsession with the basement and Levi’s loyalty as a form of penance, weaving in flashbacks that fracture timelines to show how trauma lingers. There’s one AO3 fic where Levi hallucinates Erwin’s voice post-Rumbling, and the gradual shift from torment to acceptance had me clutching my chest. Another universe that nails this is 'The Untamed'. Lan Wangji and Wei Wuxian’s canon is already a masterclass in grief-stricken love, but fanworks amplify it. I read a modern AU where Wei Wuxian is a journalist covering Lan Wangji’s family scandal, and their mutual isolation becomes this quiet fortress. The author used fragmented prose—half-finished sentences, journal entries bleeding into dialogue—to mirror their fractured minds. Redemption here isn’t grand gestures; it’s Lan Wangji learning to cook spicy food despite hating it, or Wei Wuxian planting lotus pods on a balcony as silent atonement. Trauma isn’t erased but reshaped into something bearable, which feels painfully real.

Why Do Reviewers Write Nuff Said In Movie Blurbs?

5 Answers2025-08-25 00:43:41
It always cracks me up when I see 'nuff said' tacked onto a blurb like a gum wrapper—it's such a tiny, cheeky stamp of approval. Reviewers use it because it's fast, punchy, and communicates that everything else you might want to know is wrapped up in one premise: the movie either nailed the joke, the twist, or the vibe so completely that words feel redundant. There's economy at play here; magazines and posters love a line that does a job without eating space. I’ve used that phrase in casual write-ups when I didn’t want to spoil a twist or when the emotion of a scene felt too big to reduce. Sometimes it's playful hipness, sometimes it's editorial laziness, and sometimes it's a strategic tease—like when a director or actor is so divisive or iconic that mentioning them plus 'nuff said' acts as shorthand for a whole essay. It can be annoying when overused, but when done right it makes me grin and go buy a ticket.

Who Coined The Slang Nuff Said In Pop Culture?

5 Answers2025-08-25 00:44:27
Funny thing, I always assumed 'nuff said' had a single dramatic origin like a comedian's one-liner or a movie catchphrase, but the truth is messier and way more interesting to me. Linguistically it's just a colloquial, phonetic take on 'enough said' — the clipped, conversational pronunciation turned into spelling. That kind of shift happens a lot in spoken English, especially in regional dialects and varieties like African American Vernacular English and Caribbean English where 'enough' can sound like 'nuff.' I’ve dug into old newspaper archives for fun, and you can find iterations of 'nuff' in print going back many decades; it wasn’t coined by a single famous person, it evolved. What sealed it as pop-culture shorthand was widespread use by comedians, radio hosts, athletes, and later hip-hop artists and TV writers who loved the blunt finality of it. So rather than credit one coinventor, I think of it as a communal bit of language that drifted from speech into mainstream media — and once it hit TV, movies, and music it became the little mic-drop phrase we use today.

Can I Read She Said Online For Free?

5 Answers2026-02-22 08:34:34
but finding it legally online for free is tricky. Most reputable platforms like Kindle, Google Books, or library apps (Libby, OverDrive) require a purchase or library membership. Some sites claim to offer free PDFs, but they're often sketchy or pirated, which isn't cool for the authors. If you're tight on cash, I'd recommend checking if your local library has a digital copy. Many libraries have partnerships with apps that let you borrow e-books legally. Alternatively, keep an eye out for limited-time promotions or discounts on platforms like Amazon. Supporting journalism like this matters—it's worth the wait or the few bucks!

How Does The MC Gain Powers In 'Omniverse Chat Group Overpowered In Anime World'?

4 Answers2025-06-13 00:36:07
In 'Omniverse Chat Group Overpowered in Anime World', the MC’s journey to power is a wild blend of serendipity and sheer absurdity. It starts when they stumble into a multiversal chat group—think Discord but with gods, demons, and anime protagonists as members. The group’s admin, a cryptic entity, gifts them a 'System' that lets them borrow abilities from any fictional universe. One day they’re throwing Kamehamehas, the next they’re summoning Stands, all while the System 'levels up' based on how chaotic their choices are. The catch? The powers aren’t free. The MC must complete bizarre tasks—like teaching Goku to bake or helping Light Yagami write poetry—to earn credits. Worse, the System has a glitch: sometimes it swaps abilities mid-fight, leaving the MC scrambling. Over time, they learn to fuse powers creatively, like mixing 'One for All' with 'Bankai', but the real growth comes from the chat group’s debates. Arguing with Lelouch about strategy or getting trolled by Saitama sharpens their wit as much as their strength. It’s less about grinding and more about vibing with the multiverse’s weirdest minds.

What Genre Is Demon Living In A World Of Superpower Users?

5 Answers2025-10-21 13:07:40
I dove into 'Demon Living In A World Of Superpower Users' with the kind of giddy curiosity that makes weekend marathons feel essential. The core genre is urban fantasy mixed with action: think supernatural beings and gritty fights set against a modern world where ‘power users’ are basically everyday people with extraordinary abilities. It layers in comedy and slice-of-life moments too, which keeps the pacing light between the heavy, pulse-pounding battles. Beyond the action, there's a solid supernatural and dark-fantasy vibe because the protagonist is a demon trying to navigate or survive in a society built around powers. You'll also find hints of mystery and moral ambiguity—characters aren’t simply heroes or villains, and the story enjoys bending expectations. If you like 'Solo Leveling' for the combat and 'Mob Psycho 100' for the oddball humor, this one sits somewhere between those tones. I kept smiling at the character quirks and rooting during clashes, so it’s definitely a guilty-pleasure read that still scratches the itch for worldbuilding and thrilling set pieces.

What Are The Biggest Two Can Play Fan Theories?

9 Answers2025-10-20 04:39:32
I get a kick out of the way two wild theories keep bouncing around fandoms like ping-pong balls: the 'Jar Jar is a Sith Lord' theory and the idea that Severus Snape was secretly the most selfless character in 'Harry Potter'. Both are the kind of speculations that inspire late-night Reddit threads, fan art, and whole fanfics where everything clicks into place if you squint hard enough. Take the 'Jar Jar' theory for a sec: people point to his weird movements, improbable luck, and his sudden political rise in 'Star Wars' as clues. It’s one of those crowd-favorite conspiracy-style takes — chaotic, fun, and deliberately unproven. On the flip side, the Snape theory is emotional and layered; fans comb through dialogue, Patronus symbolism, and Dumbledore’s quiet manipulations to argue Snape was operating from the deepest kind of loyalty. That theory got a lot more traction after later books made his motives explicit, but the debate about nuance and moral ambiguity never quite dies. Both theories do similar things for communities: they make rewatching or rereading a treasure hunt, and they let fans reframe characters in more complex lights. Personally, I love how these theories push people to look closer and talk louder about storytelling choices — it’s part of why fandoms stay alive.

Who Originally Said 'Life Is Like A Bicycle'?

3 Answers2025-09-09 02:12:10
The quote 'life is like a bicycle' is often attributed to Albert Einstein, though pinning it down with absolute certainty is tricky. I stumbled upon this phrase years ago while browsing a forum about inspirational quotes, and it stuck with me because of its simplicity and depth. The idea behind it—that balance and forward motion are essential—resonates so much with how I approach my hobbies. Whether it’s keeping up with weekly manga releases or grinding through a tough game level, the metaphor holds up. What’s fascinating is how this quote transcends its origin. Even if Einstein didn’t say it verbatim, the sentiment feels universal. I’ve seen it repurposed in anime like 'Yowamushi Pedal,' where characters literally pedal through life’s challenges. It’s one of those lines that feels timeless, whether you’re a student cramming for exams or an adult juggling work and passion projects. Maybe that’s why it keeps popping up in fan discussions and motivational edits.
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status