bdNorth East.co.uk

Forever Football Uk Ltd.

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13 Chase Meadow
Chase Farm Drive
Blyth
Northumberland
NE24 4LW



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forever

1. everlastingly, eternally, forever, evermore
usage: for a limitless time; "no one can live forever"; "brightly beams our Father''s mercy from his lighthouse evermore"- P.P.Bliss
2. always, forever
usage: seemingly without interruption; often and repeatedly; "always looking for faults"; "it is always raining"; "he is forever cracking jokes"; "they are forever arguing"
3. forever, forever and a day
usage: for a very long or seemingly endless time; "she took forever to write the paper"; "we had to wait forever and a day"
. without ever ending; eternally: to last forever.
2. continually; incessantly; always: He''s forever complaining.
3. forever and a day, eternally; always: They pledged to love each other forever and a day. An endless or seemingly endless period of time: It took them forever to make up their minds.

football

1. a game in which two opposing teams of 11 players each defend goals at opposite ends of a field having goal posts at each end, with points being scored chiefly by carrying the ball across the opponent''s goal line and by place-kicking or drop-kicking the ball over the crossbar between the opponent''s goal posts. Cf. conversion , field goal , safety , touchdown.
2. the ball used in this game, an inflated oval with a bladder contained in a casing usually made of leather.
3. Chiefly Brit.Rugby .
4. Chiefly Brit.soccer.
5. something sold at a reduced or special price.
6. any person or thing treated roughly or tossed about: They''re making a political football of this issue.
7. U.S. Govt. Slang. a briefcase containing the codes and options the president would use to launch a nuclear attack, carried by a military aide and kept available to the president at all times.
football, any of a number of games in which two opposing teams attempt to score points by moving an inflated oval or round ball past a goal line or into a goal. Differing greatly in their rules, these include soccer and rugby, in addition to the games covered in this article: American football, Canadian football, Gaelic football, and Australian football. In the United States, the word football generally refers only to the American game; in other parts of the world it usually means soccer. Football, amateur and professional, is perhaps the most popular spectator sport in the United States, attracting a total attendance of over 40 million and watched by many more millions on television each year