dubdobdee: (hobbs)
dubdobdee ([personal profile] dubdobdee) wrote2012-01-13 10:12 am
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wiki-illiam #107: q17

17:

i: Who started off as Nijntje?
Dick Bruna's MIFFY, in the original Dutch (PJ)
ii: Who played patty-cake with Acme?
JESSICA RABBIT in Who Framed Roger Rabbit?: Marvin Acme owned Toontown (JW)
iii: Who was the tyrannical leader of the Efrafans?
GENERAL WOUNDWORT, in Watership Down (DDD)
iv: As what did the Australian dog perceive the gentleman dancing on an ashpit?
Yellow Dog Dingo called pre-op Old Man Kangaroo "that CAT-RABBIT" in Kipling's Just So Stories (DDD, with slight look-upage to check)
v: Which swamp-dweller sustained auricular damage prior to rescue from the Black Serpent?
This is the cottontail rabbit RAGGYLUG, from Ernest Thompson Seton's
Wild Animals I Have Known
(DDD via google)
vi: Whose marital violence led indirectly to the accidental drowning of his baby daughter Rebecca June?
Someone understandably forgettable in Updike's Rabbit novels, probably Run, Rabbit (MM)
vii: What popular design was started by an Augustinian Canoness of the Lateran?
BUNNIKINS ROYAL DOULTON, a line of uber-twee ceramic ware (DDD helped by JW GiS of clue)
viii: Who put on spectacles and was directed to begin at the beginning?
The WHITE RABBIT at the trial in Alice in Wonderland (DDD)
ix: Who brewed very good ale for gentlemen?
Beatrix Potter's CECILY PARSLEY (DDD with googly memory-jog)
x: What is essentially cheese on toast?
WELSH RABBIT! (DDD)

[identity profile] dubdobdee.livejournal.com 2012-01-13 10:12 am (UTC)(link)
Aha, well I kinda got this while I was formating it, and -- instead of holding back politely to let you soppy lot have a go -- I was so pleased with getting one answer (which I admit I had to look up to confirm) I followed through.

x: depending on the theme: is rather plausibly WELSH RABBIT, falsely rationalised as "rarebit"
iv: this is the one I got at sight, thus-wise -- "KIPLING ALERT: Australian dog" is surely Yellow Dog Dingo, from Just So Stories which means the "gentleman dancing on an ashpit" is Old Man Kangaroo before he got his legs and was well and truly run after -- OMK started out as a kind of bouncy grey thing, so no doubt YDD called him such-and-such "rabbit"? Quick check, and yes: "That CAT-RABBIT"
i: pretty sure this is the original African name for the Hare latterly known as BRER RABBIT
iii: Watership Down for sure, and I believe GENERAL WOUNDWORT -- but ppl who read it more recently than me can confirm.
viii: This is the WHITE RABBIT in Alice down the Bunnyhole: I think during in the trial, when he reads the charges out.
ix: This sounds like Beatrix Potter's rhythm, but I'd have to check unless anyone has it by heart.

So the theme is RABBITS and x is confirmed.

[identity profile] jeff-worrell.livejournal.com 2012-01-13 10:27 am (UTC)(link)
ii. is Jessica Rabbit in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" Marvin Acme was the owner of Toontown

[identity profile] petra jane (from livejournal.com) 2012-01-13 10:48 am (UTC)(link)
Nijntje is the little Dutch rabbit known to English-speaking toddlers as Miffy. My baby brother is a big fan.

[identity profile] marnameow.livejournal.com 2012-01-13 11:03 am (UTC)(link)
vi is Rabbit of the John Updike Rabbit books. There are four. The first one's called Rabbit, Run and the last Rabbit at Rest, and I can't remember the names of the middle two, nor the proper name of the lead character.

[identity profile] petra jane (from livejournal.com) 2012-01-13 11:30 am (UTC)(link)
vii would suggest famous lapine illustrators, but we've already had Ms Potter and I'm pretty much certain she never spent time as a nun. Hrmm.