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Grimace may refer to: A type of facial expression usually of disgust, disapproval, or pain; Grimace (composer), a French composer active in the mid-to-late 14th century; Grimace (character), a McDonaldland marketing character developed to promote the restaurant's milkshakes; Grimace scale, a method of assessing the occurrence or severity of pain
Grimace, the purple McDonald's monster, is apparently celebrating its birthday. McDonald's dropped a new item in honor of Grimace's big day: a purple milkshake. It's trending online.OK, those are ...
McDonald's is behind one of the summer's most coveted treats, which has put its mascot Grimace at the forefront of a viral trend. And it all started with what appeared to be a simple promotion in ...
Tika, Hamburglar, and Birdie fail each riddle and are swept into traps, leaving only Ronald, Grimace, and Sundae to solve the final one, which they do. The holographic head turns out to be a child named Franklin programming the game, with help from Tika and the McNuggets in a lab room.
Some McDonald's representatives described Grimace as an "embodiment of a milkshake or a taste bud", but his identity remains up to interpretation for many fans. [3] [2] McDonald's says Grimace comes from Grimace Island, along with other family members like Uncle O'Grimacey, who is known for bringing Shamrock Shakes for Saint Patrick's Day. [1] [2]
After the Grimace shake was taken off the menu last year, people across the internet have come up with recipes for the purple shake. The three main ingredients to make the shake are vanilla ice ...
“If Grimace is a taste bud meant to show how good the food is why on earth would you name the damn thing after an expression of disgust,” another Twitter user pointed out. His feet are light ...
And in effect his style brings unpublished stylistic novelties such as the inverted simile (Swords like Lips) or the equivalent disjunctive nexus (Destruction or Love), the hyperbole adds, the uncoded dream symbol, enriching without question the stylistic possibilities of the Spanish poetic language, just as Garcilaso, Góngora and Rubén ...