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In their early appearances, they are portrayed as typical young people of the 1920s, [4] and the stories and settings have a more pronounced period-specific flavor than other stories featuring more popular Christie characters. As they age, they are revealed to have raised three children – twins Deborah and Derek and an adopted daughter, Betty.
The characters in Lynn Johnston's cartoon strip For Better or For Worse have extensive back stories. The birthdates of the characters given below were the characters' birthdates as shown on the strip's website [1] prior to the cartoonist's decision to re-boot the strip from 1 September 2008, returning the setting to the early years of John and Elly's marriage.
The living soul of the other world which resides in its molten core. She is an old friend of Ōma and Yūnosuke Tenjō, Yūya's grandfather. She is also aware of everything going on in her world, and is the one who appoints the Saints and bestows them with their special powers to maintain the balance between good and evil.
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A young child who joins the cast of an ongoing series (usually a sitcom) after the previous younger characters have grown older and can no longer provide the comic plot lines they used to as child actors. Named after a character added in the final episodes of The Brady Bunch, after the youngest Brady stepsiblings had grown into preteens.
Emma is an 11-year-old girl. She is one of the oldest orphans living in Grace Field House. She has a much more optimistic and positive personality than Norman and Ray. . Furthermore, she is frequently getting full scores of 300 points in her daily tests and her athleticism is high, but she wants to keep up with her perform
In Earthsea, each individual among the Hardic peoples has several names over the course of their life: a child-name, a use-name and a true name.Up to puberty, a person is known by their child-name; at their rite of Passage, at about the age of thirteen, that name is taken from them and they are given their true name in the Old Speech by a witch, sorcerer, or wizard.
A character named C!Mot is briefly mentioned in non-Discworld novel, The Also People, by Ben Aaronovitch. Aaronovitch has confirmed that C!Mot is intended as a parallel Dibbler. A character called 'Clap-Me-In-Irons Daoibleagh' appears in the webcomic Rogues of Clwyd-Rhan. The Cretaceous conifer species Sulcatocladus dibbleri is named after CMOT ...