In which order of these...
Leo, an animal, a book, an item in the title of the book, an object from inside the item, a form of the object worn for special events or at work as part of the job, a form of this which is contraction of the English words, a specialization of this contraction, a subset of this specialization which are referred to as something which the word looks very similiar to a term used in currency.
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Well, perhaps the rest of these will only be solved as a group effort. On this one, we go from Leo -> Lion -> The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe -> wardrobe -> clothing --?--> uniform, and then... I'm lost. Anyone? - Nunh-huh 01:27, 24 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Leo, an animal, a book, an item in the title of the book, an object from inside the item, a form of the object worn for special events or at work as part of the job, a form of this which is contraction of the English words, a specialization of this contraction, a subset of this specialization which are referred to as something which the word looks very similiar to a term used in currency.
Hmm... Leo seems to be referring to a lion. The only book (besides The Lion King (which wasn't a book, was it?)) I can think of with lion in the title is CS. Lewis's The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe. It obviously isn't the witch (not much inside her!), so it is the wardrobe. What's inside a wardrobe- coats? Then uniforms- at this point I'm confused. Am I on the right track? Flcelloguy | A note? | Desk 01:31, 26 Jun 2005 (UTC)
P.S. WikiFun is not only fun but time-consuming!
I think Cosplay is the next part, as it's a contraction of costume and play...
I have it
The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe -> Wardrobe -> Clothing -> Costume -> Cosplay -> kigurumi -> dollers
Btw, since I haven't registered for WikiPedia, is it okay if I just use the name Solo Maxwell when I answer?
Why hasn't this been "answered" and points been awarded? Just curious sars 09:58, July 22, 2005 (UTC)
In which order of these...
Leo, an animal, a book, an item in the title of the book, an object from inside the item, a form of the object worn for special events or at work as part of the job, a form of this which is contraction of the English words, a specialization of this contraction, a subset of this specialization which are referred to as something which the word looks very similiar to a term used in currency.
Answer this question
Well, perhaps the rest of these will only be solved as a group effort. On this one, we go from Leo -> Lion -> The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe -> wardrobe -> clothing --?--> uniform, and then... I'm lost. Anyone? - Nunh-huh 01:27, 24 Jun 2005 (UTC)
Leo, an animal, a book, an item in the title of the book, an object from inside the item, a form of the object worn for special events or at work as part of the job, a form of this which is contraction of the English words, a specialization of this contraction, a subset of this specialization which are referred to as something which the word looks very similiar to a term used in currency.
Hmm... Leo seems to be referring to a lion. The only book (besides The Lion King (which wasn't a book, was it?)) I can think of with lion in the title is CS. Lewis's The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe. It obviously isn't the witch (not much inside her!), so it is the wardrobe. What's inside a wardrobe- coats? Then uniforms- at this point I'm confused. Am I on the right track? Flcelloguy | A note? | Desk 01:31, 26 Jun 2005 (UTC)
P.S. WikiFun is not only fun but time-consuming!
I think Cosplay is the next part, as it's a contraction of costume and play...
I have it
The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe -> Wardrobe -> Clothing -> Costume -> Cosplay -> kigurumi -> dollers
Btw, since I haven't registered for WikiPedia, is it okay if I just use the name Solo Maxwell when I answer?
Why hasn't this been "answered" and points been awarded? Just curious sars 09:58, July 22, 2005 (UTC)