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Like a kid, cross my heart and hope to die.
At that she made me cross my heart and hope to die if I told anybody."
Moreover, every one of them once upon a time in his youth - "cross my heart and hope to die!"
'Cross my heart and hope to die if I'm doing that.
"Cross my heart and hope to die," Honey said.
Crossing fingers indicates swearing truth as in "cross my heart and hope to die."
I can't believe it" "Cross my heart and hope to die, they've never laid eyes on me in their lives.
"Cross my heart and hope to die, may dogs chew on my bones if I lie."
"Cross my heart and hope to die," Adam said, going through the motions across his hibiscus-patterned polo.
"Puts a different meaning on 'cross my heart and hope to die.'
Cross My Heart and Hope to Die (for adults)
"So I crossed my heart and hoped to die," Beck told me good-naturedly as we stood in the blowing snow and waning light.
"I agree," said Rollo, "that it has a robotic look about it, but cross my heart and hope to die, I've never seen one like it."
Donald "Cross my heart and hope to die" and the boys dress him up in a costume of their own and make him trick-or-treat with them.
"Cross my heart and hope to die," Muriel said dramatically, as they opened the schoolroom door, to be greeted by a frown from Miss Turnbull.
It said: Now I lay me down to sleep, Devil take my soul to keep; Cross my heart and hope to die, If I tell another lie.
Song: "Cross My Heart and Hope To Die" - (Sid Wayne & Ben Weisman)
"I know I've been bad and that I deserved to be punished for what I did, but I promise -cross my heart and hope to die - I'll be good.
"Cross my heart and hope to die," he had said, drawing an X with his finger across his chest, while his son mimicked him and flashed a smile wider than the Crab Nebula.
I promise cross my heart and hope to die...' His last inane comment reminded him of Troop Sergeant Bosche again and he shut the door quickly, forcing himself to wave as the cab pulled into the stream of traffic.
Not much distinguishes Otto (Martin Dahl Garfalk), the opaque main character of "Cross My Heart and Hope to Die," beyond the fact that he seems unusually glum for a 13-year-old and is too easily led into mischief.
"Cross My Heart and Hope to Die," which is being shown at the Museum of Modern Art tonight at 6 as part of New Directors/New Films, isn't a bad film, but as a coming-of-age story it seems all too familiar.
Also, the fictional town of "Crossmaheart" in based on the South Armagh village of Crossmaglen, known for the numerous incidents which occurred in the area during The Troubles; the name being a play on words referring to the childs vow "cross my heart and hope to die".