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Printable version; In other projects ... The Jungle Book characters (11 P) M. Moomin characters (1 C, 6 P, 1 F) N.
follow the organization of a passage and to identify antecedents and references in it, draw inferences from a passage about its contents, identify the main thought of a passage, ask questions about the text, answer questions asked in a passage, visualize the text, recall prior knowledge connected to text, recognize confusion or attention problems,
The cylinder is a Christmas toy collection barrel for a girls' orphanage, and all five characters are dolls. The loud clanging was the ringing of a bell, used by a woman to attract donations; she tells the girl to return the doll to the barrel. The five characters, now dolls with painted faces and glass eyes, lie unmoving.
The graphic novels are set in a fantastic world resembling a late 20th century Norse.They draw inspiration from Nordic folklore and the Moomins. [2] The titular character is a small girl, who in the first two books lives with her mother in a cottage on a plain surrounded by mountains and forests, but later moves to the city Trolberg.
This name was the nickname of the real life Mavis Altounyan, taken from Joseph Jacobs's children's story Titty Mouse and Tatty Mouse. [1] The name has caused amusement among generations of children since, causing it to be changed to Kitty in the original 1963 television series of Swallows and Amazons , and Tatty for a 2016 BBC Films adaptation ...
"The Disobedient Kids" is a Czecho-Slovak variant. [9] A variant has been reported to be present in Moroccan folktale collections. [10] Hasan El-Shamy located an Egyptian version from Ajhūr al Kubrá, named The Nanny Goat with the Iron Horns. [11] Russian folklorist Alexander Afanasyev listed The Wolf and the Kids as another variant. [12]
Like Nesbit's The Railway Children, the story begins when a group of children move from London to the countryside of Kent.The five children (Cyril, Anthea, Robert, Jane, and their baby brother, Hilary, known as "the Lamb") are playing in a gravel pit when they uncover a rather grumpy, ugly, and occasionally malevolent Psammead, a sand-fairy with the ability to grant wishes.
B. Baker Street Irregulars; Myrcella Baratheon; Tommen Baratheon; List of Lewis Barnavelt novels; Binky Barnes; Bartje; Oswald Bastable; Charley Bates; Baudelaire children