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Post by Brian on Nov 1, 2003 17:27:29 GMT -5
How can it be baby/preschool if it's hardcover and 176 pages? I bet that Amazon just doesn't know the level yet and that baby/preschool is the default setting for that category.
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Post by ponygirl's vapor on Nov 1, 2003 19:28:35 GMT -5
thats irrelevent... we know that that has nothing to do with the 11th book, so it doesnt matter.
Its the Grim Grotto.
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Post by Nate2632 on Nov 1, 2003 21:54:36 GMT -5
remember, we have to take into consideration that the Baulds lived on a submarine. I don't think its a greenary. Maybe its a place that has abandoned ships and submarines. And its all dark there, so mushrooms grow. Or maybe we meet someone who likes to eat mushrooms, or has mushrooms on there dress.
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Post by SnicketFires on Nov 1, 2003 22:47:00 GMT -5
grange is a grain mill, i cant remember what gregarous means.
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Post by cwm3 on Nov 2, 2003 4:03:09 GMT -5
The greenery might be near the sea, so a submarine might have run aground there.
What Amazon says isn't rock-solid proof; the book's going to be longer than 176 pages.
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Post by ponygirl's vapor on Nov 2, 2003 13:39:58 GMT -5
ok guys, you really think it's greenery? wtf?
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Post by SnicketFires on Nov 2, 2003 15:17:44 GMT -5
greenery isn't a place. Grotto is a place. Graveyard is a place. We can saftly assume this isn't the 1st or 13th book, so it most likly be a PLACE
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Post by cwm3 on Nov 3, 2003 3:36:22 GMT -5
Who said it had to be a place? TWW and TBB weren't describing a place. TEE technically wasn't, too. It doesn't have to be a place; it could be a thing. Or even a person.
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Post by SnicketFires on Nov 3, 2003 21:37:09 GMT -5
TWW wasnt describing a place cuz it was describing a THING in the place which was an important detail in the place. TBB isnt a place but it starts the series. DH had to get us hooked (lol hook handed man)i think #13 is gonna be describing - ie dangerous denemount... etc...
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Post by Newbia on Nov 3, 2003 23:37:20 GMT -5
It's the Grim Grinder. 'Grinder' is another word for submarine. The sandwhich, but still!
What is it with you people and the mushrooms? They're just a picture, never actually mentioned, and yet you take it as a huge clue. This isn't bad (I am reminded of Blaise Zabini from Harry Potter, a person who was mentioned once in a sorting and they're not even sure the gender but appears in every fan fiction), but still, it could just be artistic license...
I read somewhere that it is the Grim Gameroom. While it certainly looks like a R, it could be an A, possibly. Eh.
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Post by SnicketFires on Nov 4, 2003 20:24:30 GMT -5
its the only thing, unless you count a poncho voilet was already wearing, a common place book quigly was holding up so it woudnt get wet or some wood. of course theres always the orphans. there in every book too.
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Post by ponygirl's vapor on Nov 6, 2003 17:21:47 GMT -5
those aren't out of place things. mushrooms are.
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Post by DetectiveDupin on Nov 8, 2003 7:46:53 GMT -5
Grind Mill? They've been in a mill. Grinder sounds possible. The Grim Groom? The Grim Green-wood?
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Post by SnicketFires on Nov 8, 2003 15:20:18 GMT -5
greenwood... sounds good in relation to clues (ie green wood used in Snicket Quag and Baudelaire mansions, and VFD hqs in the city being painted green) but where would greenwood be? a forest?
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Belly Of The Beast
Reptile Researcher
You've already seen the teeth of the beast...the claws of the beast...and the hair of the beast...
Posts: 46
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Post by Belly Of The Beast on Nov 23, 2003 14:11:10 GMT -5
The Grim Grapnel Grapnel: Grap"nel\, n. [OE. grapenel, dim. fr. F. grappin the grapple of a ship; of German origin. See Grape.] (Naut.) A small anchor, with four or five flukes or claws, used to hold boats or small vessels; hence, any instrument designed to grapple or hold; a grappling iron; a grab;
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