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The Butterfinger series revolves around the escapades of thirteen-year-old Amar Kishen, a class VIII student of the fictitious Green Park Higher Secondary School. Amar's slip-grip methods and his clumsy antics earned him the nickname Butterfingers.
Amin Damoola (voiced by Jeff Bennett impersonating Peter Sellers) is a clumsy, cowardly, and incompetent thief, who is nicknamed "Butterfingers" by his fellow criminals due to his incompetence and attempts to cause trouble for Aladdin.
Butterfinger was withdrawn from the market in Germany in 1999, because of consumer rejection when it was one of the first products to be identified as containing genetically modified ingredients (GMOs) from corn. [6] [7] Butterfinger sales ended after a successful campaign by Greenpeace pushed Nestlé to remove the product from German ...
Used to describe: An annoying person. The most distressing of all weasels, cheese weasel is someone extremely annoying or irritating. It started in the early 1990s and fell away far too quickly ...
Pflaumentoffel. Pflaumentoffel (probably etymologically related to Toffel, meaning 'stupid, clumsy person') [1] [2] is a traditional German edible sweet in the shape of a human figure made from dried or baked prunes and produced by bakeries, pastry shops and gingerbread makers for children for Christmas.
2. Stupid, clumsy person [42] boiled as an owl Alternate names for intoxicated; see § drunk [43] [b] boiler Automobile [17] boob Dumb guy [41] boob-tickler Girl who has to entertain her father's customers from out of town [5] bookkeeping The art of making a date [5] booklegger. Main article: Rum-running. Dealer in suppressed novels [5] bootleg ...
The riddle probably exploited, for misdirection, the fact that "humpty dumpty" was also eighteenth-century reduplicative slang for a short and clumsy person. [12] The riddle may depend upon the assumption that a clumsy person falling off a wall might not be irreparably damaged, whereas an egg would be.
For example, a socially clumsy person can be described as nunchi eoptta (λμΉ μλ€), meaning "absence of nunchi". Writing in the Korea Times , scholar and cultural critic David Tizzard describes the importance of nunchi in Korean life by contrasting it to British culture : "I was raised to stand up straight, look people in the eye, and ...