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Flippy and Flop are a cartoon yellow canary and black-and-white cat duo that appeared in theatrical shorts from 1945 to 1947 by Screen Gems for Columbia Pictures. [1] The canary, Flippy, made his debut in 1945's Dog Cat and Canary .
Grunge speak was a hoax series of slang words purportedly connected to the subculture of grunge in Seattle, reported as fact in The New York Times in 1992. The collection of alleged slang words were coined by a record label worker in response to a journalist asking if grunge musicians and enthusiasts had their own slang terms, seeking to write a piece on the subject.
Flippity and Flop [4] The Pied Piper of Basin Street: Mayor [4] Mouse in Manhattan: Jerry Mouse, Alley Cat [3] [4] Booby Socks: Cat [4] Donald's Crime: Donald's Conscience [4] Duck Pimples: Leslie J. Clark Phoney Baloney: Newsboy #2 Captain Tugboat Annie: Man Uncredited Speaking of Animals: From A to Zoo: Hippopotamus Voice, uncredited Quiet ...
"Da Flippity Flop" is the nineteenth episode and the season finale of the ninth season of American Dad!, as well as the 152nd episode of the series. The episode aired in the United States on May 12, 2013, on Fox 's Animation Domination lineup.
Episode plots include Jeff discovering Roger is an alien and being stranded on an alien space ship in a two-episode story arc ("Naked to the Limit, One More Time", "Lost in Space"), Klaus finding his human body, then switching with Stan's ("Da Flippity Flop"), Roger becoming Stan's stepfather ("American Stepdad") and Hayley getting a job as a ...
Flip–flop kinetics, a phenomenon in pharmacokinetics when a drug is released at a sustained rate instead of immediate release A common name of the African wood white butterfly ( Leptosia alcesta ) Flip flop, per top, bottom and versatile , a role reversal between two men during a single sexual encounter
As another example, in the episode "Da Flippity Flop" when the essence of Klaus has entered Stan's body and taken control over it, he attempts to deceive Hayley and Francine into thinking he is truly Stan; however, Hayley instantaneously and lackadaisically acknowledges that it is Klaus. [7]
Ears can flop and tails can sway--flippity, floppity, wiggeldy, waggeldy-- All of your troubles away. An instrumental version of the song was used as the introductory theme to each cartoon.