En f茅vrier 2013, le groupe entame sa seconde tourn茅e mondiale, le Take Me Home Tour. Le groupe se produit sur quatre continents pour un total de 131 concerts. Ils donnent ainsi 61 concerts en Europe, 41 aux Etats Unis, 25 en Australie et 2 en Asie. Chaque date est compl猫te et les cinq gar莽ons remportent tous les suffrages sur sc猫ne.
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I seem to have put the cat among the pigeons .I may have influenced the discussion by suggesting "worn out" as a possible meaning of "scarcagnato", which you all confirm is true.However, no native English speaker would ever refer to a wall as being worn out, simply because its use is reserved for something which is consumed by rubbing, wearing, friction, etc. I'm sorry, Benzene, but one wouldn't say "a down at heel wall".On the other hand given your levels of English you are probable all aware that a common English idiomatic expression which means to be very tired is "to be worn out".I may have influenced the discussion by suggesting "worn out" as a possible meaning of "scarcagnato", which you all confirm is true.It's not because of your influence that we confirmed that meaning. "Worn out"/"worn"/"shabby"/"raddled" is what the Italian "scalcagnato" actually means.However, no native English speaker would ever refer to a wall as being worn out, simply because its use is reserved for something which is consumed by rubbing, wearing, friction, etc.Exactly like "scalcagnato". A wall cannot be "scalcagnato"; the adjectives used for an old wall may be the ones I listed in my post 10.But your friend used the dialect word "scaRcagnato" instead (see here), which has a wider range of meanings than its Italian equivalent, so can be referred also to cars and buildings.When referred to a wall, such as in your case, its meaning is like "dilapidated", "shabby", "run down", "decrepit", "decaying" (it depends on how much ruined the wall is).i≫?un museo del regime i marmi di Lenin e Marx ai giardinetti