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He Who Shrank: Henry Hasse: A man continuously shrinks through endless levels of worlds nested within worlds. 1937 The Extraordinary Adventures of Karik and Valya: Janis Larri Two children drink a miniaturizing elixir by mistake, shrink about two hundred times, and go on adventures in the grass "jungles". 1942 Twig: Elizabeth Orton Jones
The Canadian edition was released on the United Artists label after Family had delivered Bandstand the following album, and had an explanatory sticker on the shrink-wrap. [citation needed] The UK edition of the album came housed in a plastic see-through sleeve with a gatefold non-pocket inner card design by Hamish and Gustav.
The year 1989 saw the release of Disney's Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, which grossed $222 million (equivalent to $545.67 million in 2023) at the box office worldwide and spawned a media franchise consisting of two sequels, Honey, I Blew Up the Kid and Honey, We Shrunk Ourselves, as well as a television series and a few theme park attractions ...
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I shrank. I have shrunk. It's the "have". Just like drink/drank/drunk or stink/stank/stunk. - 75.133.80.44 18:54, 5 March 2009 (UTC) I came here wondering the same thing. In International English shrank is the past tense of shrink. Shrunk is the past participle. The past participle is the form used with have or had as in I have shrunk the t shirt.
UK economy to shrink by 0.3% – the worst of any G7 country, as IMF warns of more turmoil ... with growth rates jumping from 2.8 per cent in 2022 to 4.5 per cent this year,” the IMF said. In ...
If your grocery bags feel lighter or your trips to the store are becoming more frequent, you’re not alone. Some companies are reducing the size or quantity of their products rather than raising ...
AmE further allows other irregular verbs, such as dive (dove) [9] [10] or sneak (snuck), [11] [12] and often mixes the preterite and past participle forms (spring–sprang, US also spring–sprung), [13] [14] sometimes forcing verbs such as shrink (shrank–shrunk) to have a further form, thus shrunk–shrunken.