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It involves knocking on the front door (or ringing the doorbell) of a victim, then running away before the door can be answered. [1] The name knock, knock, ginger, “knock down ginger” or knocky door ginger, used in parts of Southern England, is attested at least as early as 1867, in an English poem found in the "Childhood in Poetry" collection:
Asarum canadense, commonly known as Canada wild ginger, Canadian snakeroot, and broad-leaved asarabacca, is a herbaceous, perennial plant which forms dense colonies in the understory of deciduous forests throughout its native range in eastern North America, from the Great Plains east to the Atlantic Coast, and from southeastern Canada south to around the Fall Line in the southeastern United ...
PEPSI (51A: "That's What I Like" cola) In 2020, PEPSI adopted its newest tagline, "That's What I Like." PEPSI has been around for 131 years. (From 1893-1898 it was marketed as Brad's Drink.)
Ginger and Mark quickly follow her, but find she locked her door. They call Roland, who breaks the door in, and they find that Nat has taken an overdose. They rush the still conscious woman to the hospital. Rosa pleads with Ginger to forgive her. As Roland and Ginger wait for Nat at the hospital, Ginger writes a letter to Rosa, in the form of a ...
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Asarum caudatum (British Columbia wild ginger, western wild ginger, or long-tailed wild ginger) is a plant native to rich moist forests of western North America. It has heart-shaped leaves and a three-lobed purplish flower.
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Asarum europaeum, commonly known as asarabacca, European wild ginger, hazelwort, and wild spikenard, historically cabarick, is a species of flowering plant in the birthwort family Aristolochiaceae, native to large parts of temperate Europe, and also cultivated in gardens.