SmartAnswer
Smart answer:
After reading 2244 websites, we found 14 different results for "What is the year of release of Read My Lips"
in 2001
Since the release of Sophie Ellis-Bextor's debut album Read My Lips in 2001, which sold over 2 million copies worldwide, Ellis-Bextor has had six Top 10 singles, including Take Me Home, Get Over You, and of course Murder on the Dancefloor.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
2006
My Lips was written with co-authors Cyndi O'Meara, Jodie McIver, Fleur Whelligan, Kim Morrison, and Allison Mooney, and released 14 February 2006.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
2011
the Lips originally came out in 2011 and was rereleased by Fairfax Recordings in 2013.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
in 1937
In North America, Lips consolidated Julius Lips's professional career, carried out ethnographic fieldwork among Algonquian-speaking communities, and published – in 1937 –
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
In 1984
In 1984, a year after the Tubes released one of their most successful albums, Waybill released Waybill's first solo album called Read My Lips.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
1989
1989 saw Jimmy embark on a solo career with 5 more hit singles and two albums; Read My Lips (1989) and The Singles Collection (1990).
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
in 1996
Read My Lips, a treasury of things politicians wish they had not said, was published in 1996.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
in 1997
MY LIPS was published by Cool Grove Press in 1997 & reprinted in 2003 w. an introductory essay by La Monte Young.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
Confidence Score
Confidence Score
Confidence Score
2014
The official albums release date is late december 2014, but the CD was first available in january 2015.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score
1993
The early Read Lips (1993) is exemplary for this, as it displays the word MUM over three pages both as text and as image, the latter depicting the sketched movements of the mouth while pronouncing the word.
Source links:
ShareAnswerConfidence Score