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Nightcrawler appears in X-Men: Pryde of the X-Men, voiced by Neil Ross. [citation needed] Nightcrawler appears in X-Men: The Animated Series, voiced by Adrian Hough. [citation needed] This version is a monk at a Swiss abbey. Nightcrawler appears in X-Men '97, voiced again by Adrian Hough. [141]
Don Free (a human identity used by Thorion the Hunter). An amalgamation of DC's Scott Free and Marvel's Donald "Don" Blake. Thorion the Celestial (a cosmic being that Thorion the Hunter evolves into). An amalgamation of DC's Orion and Marvel's Thor and the Celestials. L'ok D'saad. An amalgamation of DC's DeSaad and Marvel's Loki. Bald'r ...
Bamf / b æ m f /, originally Bampf, [1] is an onomatopoeic term originating in comic books published by Marvel Comics, in particular those featuring the superhero Nightcrawler of the X-Men. The term is derived from the sound Nightcrawler makes when teleporting.
At twenty years old, Nocturne is taken by the Timebroker and told she had become "unhinged from time." [4] The Timebroker tells Nocturne that if she does not work to right the wrongs that have occurred in a multitude of alternate universes, her own timeline would remain altered and she would be returned to a universe in which Nightcrawler was murdered some time ago by his mother, Mystique.
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Nightcrawler, any large earthworm, especially those favored in angling Lumbricus terrestris, a globally-distributed species of earthworm, known in North America as nightcrawler or Canadian nightcrawler; Eudrilus eugeniae, the African night crawler, native to tropical West Africa; European nightcrawler, Eisenia hortensis
Lumbricus terrestris has several common names, including common earthworm, nightcrawler, and dew worm. It is strongly pigmented, brown-red dorsally, and yellowish ventrally. Setae are widely paired at both ends of the body.
Mating frequency is relatively high (once every 7–11 days). The relative size of the mate, the distance from the presumed mates, the chance of being dragged to the surface, and the size-related fecundity all tend to play key roles in the mating behavior of the nightcrawler. [14]