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Mischievousness |
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Mischievousness See also Joke, Practical. Ate goddess of evil and mischief. [Gk. Myth.: Parrinder, 33; Kravitz, 39] mischievous ten-year-old beset by trivial troubles. [TV: “Leave It to Beaver” in Terrace, II, 18–19] devilish page. [Br. Lit.: Waverley] clever trickster. [Children’s Lit.: Uncle Remus] turn-of-the-century enfant terrible. [Comics: Horn, 145] apelike pygmies; tried to steal Hercules’ weapons. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 206] symbolizes naughtiness and chicanery. [Jewish Tradition: Jobes, 382] latter-day Buster Brown, complete with dog. [Comics: Horn, 201] elf king who works mischief on children. [Ger. Folk-lore: LLEI, I: 283] legendary peasant known for his pranks. [Ger. Folklore: Benét, 325–326] mischievous, sharp-witted boy has many adventures. [Am. Lit.: Huckleberry Finn] kissed the girls and made them cry. [Nurs. Rhyme: Opie, 185] (Allhallows Eve) youngsters play pranks on the neighbors. [Am. Folklore: Misc.] (Red Skelton) “the mean widdle kid.” [Radio: “The Red Skelton Show” in Buxton, 197] twin Teutonic terrors. [Comics: “The Captain and the Kids” in Horn, 156–157] archetypal juvenile delinquent leads Pinocchio astray. [Am. Cinema: Pinocchio in Disney Films, 32–37] scamps unite to terrorize adults. [Am. TV: Terrace, II, 31] misguided do-gooder. [Gk. and Rom. Myth.: Brewer Dictionary, 704] “handful of wit”; Armado’s “pretty knavish page.” [Br. Lit.: Love’s Labour’s Lost] Shrove Tuesday eve when boys play tricks. [Br. Folklore: Brewer Dictionary, 756]
group of children in comedy series: always into mischief. [Am. Cinema: Halliwell, 546; Am. TV: “The Little Rascals” in Terrace, II, 31] mischievous boy plays pranks on his father. [Am. Lit.: Peck’s Bad Boy, Hart, 642] always ransacking farmer MacGregor’s patch. [Children’s Lit.: The Tale of Peter Rabbit] prank-playing fairies; mislead travelers. [Br. Folklore: Briggs, 328–330] wild shaggy colt that misled benighted travelers. [Br. Folklore: Briggs] knavish hobgoblin who plays pranks. [Br. Folklore & Lit.: A Midsummer Night’s Dream] scatterbrained gossoon; makes trouble without trying. [Irish Lit.: Handy Andy] hookey-playing, imaginative lad of St. Petersburg, Missouri. [Am. Lit.: Tom Sawyer] with his two friends, devises ingenious pranks that make life miserable for the masters of the school. [Br. Lit.: Kipling Stalky and Company] school-skipping delinquent of penny dreadful. [Br. Lit.: Charlie Wag, the Boy Burglar, Opie, 117] How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| That sort of matter-of-fact puckishness routinely punctuates a visit with Dinklage, who finds amusement in the fact that he barely even appears in the movie he's helping to stump. The very wit and urbane puckishness that writers Payne and Taylor bring to this movie and that make it so good also, at times, lead the filmmakers into the only sort of favoritism this film exhibits. As Bruno Latour, with his characteristic grace and Puckishness puts it, "To balance our accounts of society, we simply have to turn our exclusive attention away from humans and look also at non-humans. |
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