Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[[Category:Character templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page. Otherwise, add <noinclude>[[Category:Character templates]]</noinclude> to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on the same line as the code's last character.
[1] [2] The project features paper cut-outs based on the title character of the 1964 children's book Flat Stanley. [1] [2] [3] The project was designed to facilitate the improvement of the reading and writing skills of elementary school students, while also promoting an interest in learning about different people and places.
By this method, body diagrams can be derived by pasting organs into one of the "plain" body images shown below. This method requires a graphics editor that can handle transparent images, in order to avoid white squares around the organs when pasting onto the body image.
The series the character usually appears in will usually have a template, so try looking for that. Categories are also important, so try to get all the ones possible, but people will also most likely fill you in on any categories you missed anyway. The root category for fictional characters is Category:Fictional characters, so
Judge Hannah Lampert (All My Children) Living Tribunal (Marvel comics) Rhonda Pearlman ; Pei Xuan (Water Margin) Judge Rosetta Reide; Judge Rummy (eponymous comic strip) Judge Monica Ryan ; Judge Roy Snyder (The Simpsons) Judge Harold T. Stone (Night Court) Judge Turpin (the musical Sweeney Todd) Judge Arthur Vandelay
Aristotle promoted the primacy of plot over characters, that is, a plot-driven narrative, arguing in his Poetics that tragedy "is a representation, not of men, but of action and life." This view was reversed in the 19th century, when the primacy of the character, that is, a character-driven narrative, was affirmed first with the realist novel ...
The Pringles man is fairly easy to identify, right up there with other brand mascots like Chester Cheetah and Tony the Tiger. But this man is no zoo animal; he is a person like the rest of us ...
Jean Passepartout (French: [ʒɑ̃ paspaʁtu]) is a fictional character in Jules Verne's novel Around the World in Eighty Days, published in 1873. He is the French valet of the novel's English main character, Phileas Fogg. His surname translates literally to "goes everywhere", but “passepartout” is also an idiom meaning "skeleton key" in ...