Underlined is what I don't understand.Uh-huh,
Life's like this
Uh-huh, uh-huh
That's the way it is
'Cause life's like this
Uh-huh, uh-huh
That's the way it is
Chill out,
What you yellin' for?
Lay back, it's all been done before
And if you could only let it be
You will see
I like you the way you are
When we're, driving in my car
And you're talking to me
One on one
But you become
Somebody else
'Roundeveryone else
Watchin' your back
Like you can't relax
You're tryin' to be cool
You look like a fool
To me
Tell me
Why do you have to go and make things so complicated?
I see the way you're
Acting like you're somebody else gets me frustrated
Life's like this, you
And you fall and you crawl
And you break and you take
What you get and you turn it into
Honesty Promise me (Why is "p" capitalised) I'm never gonna find you fake it
No, no, no
...............
Maybe the lyrics are incorrect or it's just me.![]()
Not a teacher only a native.
Someone likes Avril...
'Somebody else, 'Roundeveryone else' - The person who the song is talking about, 'becomes somebody else' when around other people. 'Roundeveryone' should be 'Around everyone else' but it has been condensed to fit the style of the song. This follows on from the previous paragraph, if you were to write it normally it is easier to understand.
...But you become somebody else, roundeveryone else...'
Honesty Promise me (Why is "p" capitalised) - I don't know why P is capitalised here, I have had a look on other websites that have song lyrics on and most don't capitalise the word 'promise'.
Thank you! But I was hoping that you would explane me the second underlined text.
Does he turns into honesty, or he turns into what he gets?
Maybe it should be: Honestly, promise me...
Not a teacher only a native.
If you were writing the song lyrics as prose (normal writing), then you may have a comma between 'Honestly' and 'promise me', but as it's a song grammar is often altered to fit into the rhythm and flow of the song. On several other lyric sites, there is a comma between the words.