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Mr. Nosey (Mr. Men Classic Library)

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Butt-Monkey: She's always on the receiving end of comical mishaps no matter where she goes and what she does. Phrase Catcher: "MR. RUDE!" In the first season, it was said by a crowd of Mr. Men and Little Misses, but in Season 2, a random Mr. Men or Little Miss would say it in the middle of a random activity as a sort of Cutaway Gag. Mr. Rude is the 45th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves and the second one created by Adam Hargreaves. Mr. Rude has a French accent (alluding to the stereotype that the French are rude people) and, as his name suggests, is rude to everyone. He insults a man with a big nose and an overweight woman. To the overweight woman, he says "Fatty! You're supposed to eat the things in the fridge, not eat the fridge as well!" Mr. Rude is published as Monsieur Mal-Élevé in French, Don Grosero in Spanish, O Κύριος Αγενής in Greek, Senhor Rude in Portuguese, and 粗魯先生 in Mandarin.

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. Mr. Noisy always does everything so noisily, even shouting at the top of his voice. He lives on top of a hill and must go to Wobbletown at the bottom of the hill to do errands. He shouts to Mrs. Crumb, the baker, "I'D LIKE A LOAF OF BREAD!" and he shouts to Mr. Bacon, the butcher, "I'D LIKE A PIECE OF MEAT!" Having just about had it with Mr. Noisy's noisiness, Mrs. Crumb and Mr. Bacon come up with a plan. Next day, when Mr. Noisy goes shopping at both their shops again, Mrs. Crumb and Mr. Bacon just pretend not to hear him. Next day, when Mr. Noisy tries again at both shops, he realises that he has to be quiet if he's to get what he wants. He also learns not to clump his shoes, not to open and shut doors loudly, and he also learns to whisper. 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.Mr. Quiet is the 29th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Quiet lives in Loudland, where everybody and everything is too loud for him. Loudland would be suitable for Mr. Noisy, but not for Mr. Quiet. Mr. Quiet is scared. Whenever he tries to go shopping, he can only whisper what he wants, which results in the grocer, the milkman, the baker, and the butcher shouting "CAN'T HEAR YOU! NEXT PLEASE!" One day, Mr. Quiet gets a letter from Mr. Happy to stay in Happyland, where Mr. Quiet gets a job in a library, where the rule is to always be quiet. Mr. Quiet is so happy he laughs out loud. Asshole Victim: It heavily depends on the 'aggressor' and 'victim' format to have a character trait overthrow another. Mr. Stubborn however is always both an 'aggressor' as his OWN 'victim'. Catchphrase: "Whoops!", "Oh sure, I'm a trained professional.", and "That wasn't supposed to happen."

Irony: In life, when we are stubborn for the wrongest of reasons can cause us to miss out on the opportunity and harm those who cared for us. Being adamant may result in us losing everything. However, not in Mr. Stubborn's case, where rather, he is in constant battle with his belief of right and wrong to fuel his ego. BBC One will be airing the event, which will see a variety of sketches, musical performances and surprises from your favourite stars. AJ Odudu, David Tennant, Joel Dommett, Paddy McGuinness and Zoe Ball will front the programme from 7pm. Dr. First · Dr. Second · Dr. Third · Dr. Fourth · Dr. Fifth · Dr. Sixth · Dr. Seventh · Dr. Eighth · Dr. Ninth · Dr. Tenth · Dr. Eleventh · Dr. Twelfth · Dr. Thirteenth Adaptational Late Appearance: She was the first Little Miss in the books, but she shows up in the second season of the show. Mr. Bolt is a yellow Mr. Man that is based on Usain Bolt. He will join the series, but this is currently unconfirmed. [1] Mr. Bounce [ edit ] Mr. Bounce AuthorHe ties an anchor to the bed to keep it down, but the weight of the anchor causes the bed to fall through the floor!

Hate Sink: He is perhaps the most loathsome and unpleasant character, mainly due to having a lot of negative and irredeemable personality traits. Jerkass: The biggest one in the show. His name speaks for itself, and unlike most other unpleasant characters in the show, he has almost no redeeming qualities. He was even willing to leave Miss Giggles to die in "Machines". On the face of it, Mr. Nosey could be a story about nosiness with the moral "mind your own business", but the lasting impression and message is about bullying and people's seemingly inability to accept physicalities that step beyond the boundaries of the normal. Mr. Lazy is the 17th book in the Mr. Men series by Roger Hargreaves. Mr. Lazy is lazy, he lives in Sleepyland, where there are only four hours a day, as opposed to 24, and it takes two regular hours for water to boil and three regular hours for bread to toast. One day, Mr. Lazy sits down for a nap and is awoken by Mr. Busy and Mr. Bustle. They overwork him, until Mr. Bustle blows a whistle, requiring Mr. Lazy to run as fast as he can. Mr. Lazy runs, but his legs don't get him anywhere because he is sitting on a chair in the garden. He wakes up, realising it was all a dream, and the whistle was the kettle boiling in the kitchen. He sits down to have breakfast, and he goes to sleep yet again only for the events in the dream to really happen.Arbitrary Skepticism: He doesn't believe on mythical creatures like ghosts and aliens, despite the fact he lives in a world where such things exist. 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. Happy is the 3rd book in the Mr. Men series. Mr. Happy discovers Mr. Miserable (who looks exactly like him) and helps him become happy. Arbitrary Skepticism: He doesn't believe in a snow monster, even though he lives in a world where aliens and magic exists. What makes it more confusing is that he encountered a swamp creature in the first season.

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.Mr. Jelly is the 15th book in the Mr. Men series. Mr. Jelly is afraid of everything, such as the snapping of a twig. He often hides under the covers. One day, he finds a tramp sleeping in the woods, whom he is afraid of until the vagabond teaches him to count to ten whenever he feels nervous. This makes Mr. Jelly a calm fellow and he rarely hides under the covers now.

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