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Mr. Nosey (Mr. Men Classic Library)

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Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Mr. Nosy may get involved with things that are none of his business, but he nevertheless means well. In the daily syndicated comic strip, Mr. Nosey's nose was drawn shorter, fatter, and more rounded at the tip. Adaptational Late Appearance: She was the first Little Miss in the books, but she shows up in the second season of the show. Mr. Mean is the 19th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Mean is a miser who never spends a penny of his money. He is so mean he gives his brother a piece of coal for Christmas. One day a wizard starts disguising himself as a number of people in need. Each time Mr. Mean rejects helping them, a spell is placed on a part of his body, such as his nose turning into a carrot, and his ears turning into tomatoes. He gives help when he realizes his feet are about to fall under a spell. Then he spends his money, and now he gives his brother two pieces of coal for Christmas. Mr. Mean appears under the titles Mr. Stingy (USA), Monsieur Avare (French), Don Tacañete (Spanish), Unser Herr Geizig (German), 구두쇠씨 (Korean), Senhor Cruel (Portuguese), 吝嗇先生 (Taiwan), Ο Κύριος Τσιγκούνης (Greek), Meneertje Gierig (Dutch).

Rightly Self-Righteous: Prompting his claim that he’s always right and never wrong; under false pretenses, he thinks he’s always telling the truth and never lying (even when it’s the other way around), from his entitlement to his dogmatism, though not technically, but still. Ignorant of His Own Ignorance: He appears to be rather unaware of the acts he does and he is completely oblivious as to what he does wrong, as he tries to have plausible deniability for his own actions. Even then, he is contradictory. Vocal Dissonance: Her French and British voices sound more high-pitched and squeaky compare to the American and Japanese dubs. Mr. Cheeky · Mr. Christmas · Mr. Birthday · Little Miss Jealous · Little Miss Christmas · Little Miss Birthday · Little Miss Stella · Mr. Moustache · Little Miss Explorer · Little Miss Valentine · Mr. Bolt · Little Miss Waste Less · Mr. Octopus

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Hated by All: Because of his problems and troubles, he is well-disliked and incredibly feared among by many others around him. Mr. Small is the 12th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Small is a Mr. Man who lives under a daisy at the bottom of Mr. Robinson's garden. He eats very enormous meals, and talks to Walter the Worm about getting a job. He then meets Mr. Robinson, who tries to get him a job. They try putting mustard in mustard jars, and they try putting matches into matchboxes. Neither job goes well. It's decided the best job for somebody so small is writing children's books. Mr. Robinson introduces Mr. Small to a friend who writes children's books (referring to Roger Hargreaves) and writes a book all about himself. This Mr. Men book breaks the fourth wall.

Little Miss Calamity · Little Miss Daredevil · Mr. Scatterbrain · Mr. Stubborn · Mr. Metal · Little Miss Strong · Ghost · Caveman · Mummy · Cave-Nosey · Cave-Small · Mr. Rude's family · Mr. Fussy's unnamed relative · Loretto the Venus Flytrap Friend to All Living Things: He loves animals, and owns a lot of pets, which include monkeys, penguins, and even an elephant, which all appreciate his company. Flanderization: While a bit of a neat freak, Mr. Fussy is generally nice to everyone. Once he was changed to his book counterpart, he ended up taking the "fussiness" persona too much. Despite the flat two dimensional nature of the drawings it's often easy to envisage the Mr. Men in three dimensions. Mr. Nosey, however, is an exception to that rule. With his impossibly long nose, the three dimensional imagining raises a slew of practical questions. How does Nosey look down to tie his shoelaces? How does he turn around in a narrow passage? How does he wash his face? He's the only one of the Mr. Men that I think I wouldn't be able to hug.

Little Miss Helpful

Military Brat: She lives in a military hut and has a commercial promoting a boot camp on doing arts and crafts. The character of Mr. Nosey lives up to his name, along with his big nose. He is always snooping around in other people's business, much to their annoyance. The people hold a meeting and make a plan, so that every time he is being nosey, something bad happens. First he wanders into a house where Mr. Brush the painter paints his nose, so he has to scrape it off with a hard brush which is painful. The he looks over a wall and gets a clothes peg snapped on his nose. The he peeps behind a fence only to get hit by a hammer on his nose. The next day he finally learns not to be nosey and never is again, and then he becomes friends with everyone.

He lives next door to Mr. Quiet in a stereo-shaped house. Every time he walks his boots make loud stomping sounds like an elephant. A running gag in the series is he would hypocritically tell others to be quiet when clearly he is the one making noise, especially when he's at his job as the local librarian. In the episode Travel, Little Miss Magic accidentally turned him into a giant, red, loud whale. Mr. Worry is the 32nd book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Worry worries about everything. If it rains, he worries that his roof will leak, and if there is no rain, he worries that all of his plants will die. If he was going to the shop, he worries that the shops will be shut when he gets there, and if the shops weren't shut, he worries that he would have spent too much money. If he gets home from the shops, he worries that he may have left something behind, or one of his things had fallen out of his basket. If none of those things would happen, he worries that he would have bought too much stuff. After that, he worries about where to put them all. He worries about the other Mr. Men, and he meets a wizard who suggests he make a list of all his worries and the wizard will make sure none of them happen. When there is nothing to worry about, Mr. Worry was then happy for a week until Monday, when he was worried about having nothing to worry about. Mr. Walk is one of four characters created for the "A Walk in Fashion" collab created by Michael Lau. Mr. Walk is the face character of the Fashion Walk campaign alongside Little Miss Fashion, forming "Fashion Walk" together. Obliviously Evil: He's always unaware of the danger that lies ahead and he's always doing the wrong things, which largely comes from his total disregard for others, his pettiness, and occasional signs of malevolence.

Karma Houdini: She along with Miss Scary are the only characters to not get any consequences for their actions. Charles Roger Hargreaves was an English author and illustrator of children's books, notably the Mr. Men and Little Miss series, intended for very young readers. He is Britain's third best-selling author, having sold more than 100 million books.

Mr. Miserable · Mr. Right · Mr. Thrifty · Mrs. Thrifty · Little Miss Penny · Little Miss Prudence · Wilfred the Wizard · Mr. Careless · Little Miss Nobody · Mr. Mean's brother · Little Miss Bump · Mr. Beefeater's Family The Pollyanna: Due to his default happiness, he remains optimistic in spite of the misfortunes life may bring him, always looking on the bright side and embracing it. Well, most of the time anyway. Big Eater: He has a big appetite for food of the sloppy, messy variety (e.g. pizza, spaghetti, mac and cheese). In the second season, this was changed to a single Mr. Man or Little Miss shouting, oftentimes in a humorous situation of their own. Properly Paranoid: He's always on the verge of abuse and as such has a right to live in constant fear.Cheated Angle: Her front hair is non-symmetrical, yet the side views portray both the same. Though this is inverted as they're in the same length and lines. Adaptational Early Appearance: Miss Whoops was made after Adam Hargreaves took over the Mr. Men series in 2003 after the series was created, but appears in the first season of the show. Mr. Uppity is the 11th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Uppity lives in Bigtown and he is very rich. He is rude to everybody (who call him Miserable old Uppity) until one day he meets a goblin. When he is rude to the goblin, the goblin shrinks Mr. Uppity so he can fit into a hole in a tree, and they enter the tree to meet the King of the Goblins. The goblin agrees to shrink Mr. Uppity if he is rude to somebody. This happens until Mr. Uppity is nice. In the end, he's still rich, but now he's very popular. He most frequently uses the words, "Please" and "Thank you." At the end of the book, Hargreaves tells the readers: "Thank you for reading this story, and if you're ever thinking about being rude to somebody, please keep a sharp lookout for goblins." Throughout the series, Mr. Stubborn would often be irritated by a few things he absolutely hates: listening to other people especially when they try to give him good advice, things that he breaks by touching them and calls them either cheap or fake, being told what to do by other people on his job, people correcting him, taking criticism and hearing complaints, etc. LIDAR data also has some surprising uses. Minecraft players have requested the data to help them build virtual 3D worlds; archaeologists use it to map and visualise ancient landscapes such as Roman roads in Cheshire; the data is also used by the wine industry to identify new land to grow better grapes. Incident Command Vehicles

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