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MacGuffin

A Wisdom Archive on MacGuffin

MacGuffin

A selection of articles related to MacGuffin

macguffin, MacGuffin, MacGuffin - In Hitchcock's films, MacGuffin - Other examples, MacGuffin - Film, MacGuffin - Television, MacGuffin - The written word, MacGuffin - Video Games, Quest, Red herring, Deus ex machina

ARTICLES RELATED TO MacGuffin

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Cast

The cast is notable for its internationalism: only three of the credited actors were born in the U.S. The three top-billed actors were: Humphrey Bogart as Rick Blaine. Bogart became a star with Casablanca. Earlier in his career he had been typecast as a gangster, playing characters called Bugs, Rocks, Turkey, Whip, Chips, Gloves and two Dukes. High Sierra (1941) had allowed him to play a character with some warmth, but Rick was his first truly romantic role. Ingrid Bergman as Ilsa Lund. Bergman's official website ...

See also:

Casablanca film, Casablanca film - Plot, Casablanca film - Production, Casablanca film - Writing, Casablanca film - Direction, Casablanca film - Cinematography, Casablanca film - Music, Casablanca film - Reception, Casablanca film - Sequels, Casablanca film - Cast, Casablanca film - Myths, Casablanca film - Errors, Casablanca film - Criticism, Casablanca film - Awards, Casablanca film - Quotes

Read more here: » Casablanca film: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Cast

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Myths

Several myths have grown up around the film, one being that Ronald Reagan was originally chosen to play Rick. This originates in a press release issued by the studio early on in the film's development, but by that time the studio already knew that he was due to go into the army, and he was never seriously considered. The other most famous myth is that the actors did not know until the last day of shooting how the film was to end. The original play (set entirely in the cafe) had ended with Rick sending Ilsa and Victor to the airport. D ...

See also:

Casablanca film, Casablanca film - Plot, Casablanca film - Production, Casablanca film - Writing, Casablanca film - Direction, Casablanca film - Cinematography, Casablanca film - Music, Casablanca film - Reception, Casablanca film - Sequels, Casablanca film - Cast, Casablanca film - Myths, Casablanca film - Errors, Casablanca film - Criticism, Casablanca film - Awards, Casablanca film - Quotes

Read more here: » Casablanca film: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Myths

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Awards

Casablanca won three Oscars: Academy Award for Best Picture — Hal B. Wallis, producer Academy Award for Directing — Michael Curtiz Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay — Julius J. Epstein, Philip G. Epstein and Howard Koch It was also nominated for another five Oscars: Academy Award for Best Actor — Humphrey Bogart Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor — Claude Rains Academy Award for Best Cinematography, black-and-white — Arthur Edeson Academy Award for Film Editing — Owen Marks Academy Award for O ...

See also:

Casablanca film, Casablanca film - Plot, Casablanca film - Production, Casablanca film - Writing, Casablanca film - Direction, Casablanca film - Cinematography, Casablanca film - Music, Casablanca film - Reception, Casablanca film - Sequels, Casablanca film - Cast, Casablanca film - Myths, Casablanca film - Errors, Casablanca film - Criticism, Casablanca film - Awards, Casablanca film - Quotes

Read more here: » Casablanca film: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Awards

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Criticism

Roger Ebert has claimed that the film is "probably on more lists of the greatest films of all time than any other single title, including Citizen Kane", because of its wider appeal; while Citizen Kane is "greater", Casablanca is more loved. Behlmer also emphasises the variety in the picture: "it’s a blend of drama, melodrama, comedy [and] intrigue". Ebert says that he has never heard of a negative review of the film, even though individual elements can be criticised (he cites the unrealistic special effects ...

See also:

Casablanca film, Casablanca film - Plot, Casablanca film - Production, Casablanca film - Writing, Casablanca film - Direction, Casablanca film - Cinematography, Casablanca film - Music, Casablanca film - Reception, Casablanca film - Sequels, Casablanca film - Cast, Casablanca film - Myths, Casablanca film - Errors, Casablanca film - Criticism, Casablanca film - Awards, Casablanca film - Quotes

Read more here: » Casablanca film: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Criticism

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Errors

The film has several apparent logical flaws, foremost being the two "letters of transit" which enable anyone to leave for abroad. As mentioned before, it is unclear whether Ugarte says the letters have been signed by Vichy French General Maxime Weygand or then Free French leader General Charles de Gaulle. Weygand had been the Vichy French Delegate for the North-African Colonies until a month before the film is set (and a year after it was written.) De Gaulle was at the time the head of the Free French government, which was considered a rebel ...

See also:

Casablanca film, Casablanca film - Plot, Casablanca film - Production, Casablanca film - Writing, Casablanca film - Direction, Casablanca film - Cinematography, Casablanca film - Music, Casablanca film - Reception, Casablanca film - Sequels, Casablanca film - Cast, Casablanca film - Myths, Casablanca film - Errors, Casablanca film - Criticism, Casablanca film - Awards, Casablanca film - Quotes

Read more here: » Casablanca film: Encyclopedia II - Casablanca film - Errors

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography

(all dates are for release) Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films. No. 13 (Unfinished, also known as Mrs. Peabody) (1922) Always Tell Your Wife (Uncredited) (1923) The Pleasure Garden (1925) The Mountain Eagle (1926) The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog (1927) Downhill (1927) Easy Virtue (1928), based on a Noel Coward play The Ring (1927), an original story by Hitchcock. The Farmer's ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes

From 1955 to 1965, Hitchcock was the host and producer of a long-running television series entitled Alfred Hitchcock Presents. While his films had made Hitchcock's name strongly associated with suspense, the TV series made Hitchcock a celebrity himself. His irony-tinged voice, image, and mannerisms became instantly recognizable and were often the subject of parody. He directed a few episodes of the TV series himself and he upset a number of movie production companies when he insisted on using his TV production crew to produce his moti ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Main cast

See List of characters in 24 for a more thorough list. Kiefer Sutherland as Jack Bauer (seasons 1-5), a.k.a. Frank Flynn (season 5) Carlos Bernard as Tony Almeida (Seasons 2-3,5, recurring seasons 1, 4) Dennis Haysbert as Senator/President/Former President David Palmer (Seasons 1-3, recurring seasons 4-5) Reiko Aylesworth as Michelle Dessler (Season 3, recurring seasons 2, 4-5) Elisha Cuthbert as Kim Bauer (Seasons 1-3, recurring season 5) ...

See also:

24 television, 24 television - Overview, 24 television - Season synopses, 24 television - Season 1, 24 television - Season 2, 24 television - Season 3, 24 television - Season 4, 24 television - Season 5, 24 television - Behind-the-scenes information, 24 television - General trivia, 24 television - Fan phone, 24 television - Main cast, 24 television - Broadcasters, 24 television - DVD releases, 24 television - Region 1, 24 television - Region 2, 24 television - Region 3

Read more here: » 24 television: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Main cast

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Behind-the-scenes information

24 television - General trivia. A scene from the pilot episode depicting a Boeing 747 exploding was re-edited for broadcast, with the image of the plane exploding removed, in the wake of the September 11, 2001 attacks in the United States, which had occurred less than two months earlier. Alberta Watson's name was the basis for the character Alberta Green, played by Tamara Tunie in the first season. Watson later joined the cast in season four as Erin Driscoll. Xander Berkeley and Sarah Clar ...

See also:

24 television, 24 television - Overview, 24 television - Season synopses, 24 television - Season 1, 24 television - Season 2, 24 television - Season 3, 24 television - Season 4, 24 television - Season 5, 24 television - Behind-the-scenes information, 24 television - General trivia, 24 television - Fan phone, 24 television - Main cast, 24 television - Broadcasters, 24 television - DVD releases, 24 television - Region 1, 24 television - Region 2, 24 television - Region 3

Read more here: » 24 television: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Behind-the-scenes information

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Overview

24 is a thriller that purports to be shown in "real-time", with each minute of airtime corresponding to a minute in the lives of the characters. This real-time nature gives the show a strong sense of urgency, emphasized by the ticking of an on-screen digital clock appearing from time to time. Since it is an American commercial-television series, almost one-quarter of 24's time is spent on commercials, which break up the show, resulting in episodes which last about forty four minutes. Elsewhere there may be no commercials at all ...

See also:

24 television, 24 television - Overview, 24 television - Season synopses, 24 television - Season 1, 24 television - Season 2, 24 television - Season 3, 24 television - Season 4, 24 television - Season 5, 24 television - Behind-the-scenes information, 24 television - General trivia, 24 television - Fan phone, 24 television - Main cast, 24 television - Broadcasters, 24 television - DVD releases, 24 television - Region 1, 24 television - Region 2, 24 television - Region 3

Read more here: » 24 television: Encyclopedia II - 24 television - Overview

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices

Hitchcock preferred the use of suspense over surprise in his films. In surprise, the director assaults the viewer with frightening things. In suspense, the director tells or shows things to the audience which the characters in the film do not know, and then artfully builds tension around what will happen when the characters finally learn the truth. Further blurring the moral distinction between the innocent and the guilty, occasionally making this indictment clear, Hitchcock also makes voyeurs of his "respectable" audience. In Rear ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films

Hitchcock was in his mid-twenties, and a professional film director, before he'd ever drunk alcohol or been on a date. His films sometimes feature male characters struggling in their relationships with their mothers. In North by Northwest (1959), Roger Thornhill (Cary Grant's character) is an innocent man ridiculed by his mother for insisting that shadowy, murderous men are after him (in this case, they are). In The Birds (1963), the Rod Taylor character, an innocent man, finds his world under attack by vicious birds, and strug ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Awards

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences awarded Hitchcock the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award, in 1967. However, despite 6 earlier nominations, he never won an Oscar in a contested category. His unsuccessful Oscar nominations were: for Best Director: Rebecca (1940), Lifeboat (1944), Spellbound (1945), Rear Window, and Psycho; and as a producer, for Best Picture: Suspicion (1941). However Rebecca, which Hitchcock did direct, won the 1940 Best Picture Oscar for its producer David O. Selznick. Three other films Hitchcock directed were ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - Awards

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working

Hitchcock had trouble giving proper credit to the screenwriters who did so much to make his visions come to life on the screen. Gifted writers worked with him, including Raymond Chandler and John Michael Hayes, but rarely felt they had been treated as equals. Hitchcock once commented, "The writer and I plan out the entire script down to the smallest detail, and when we're finished all that's left to do is to shoot the film. Actually, it's only when one enters the studio that one enters the area of compromise. Really, the novelist has ...

See also:

Alfred Hitchcock, Alfred Hitchcock - Biography, Alfred Hitchcock - Early life, Alfred Hitchcock - Pre-war British career, Alfred Hitchcock - Hollywood, Alfred Hitchcock - Peak years and decline, Alfred Hitchcock - Themes and devices, Alfred Hitchcock - His character and its effects on his films, Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working, Alfred Hitchcock - Awards, Alfred Hitchcock - Quotations, Alfred Hitchcock - Other notes, Alfred Hitchcock - Filmography, Alfred Hitchcock - Silent films, Alfred Hitchcock - Sound films, Alfred Hitchcock - Television episodes, Alfred Hitchcock - Frequent collaborators

Read more here: » Alfred Hitchcock: Encyclopedia II - Alfred Hitchcock - His style of working

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for numbers

English employs a number of kadigans to refer to unspecified quantity: squillion (hence squillionaire = multi-millionaire), bajillion, buhmillion, gazillion, jillion, kajillion, zillion — these usually refer to large numbers that would be impractical to count; “eleventy -”; eg “eleventy-four”. (Occasionally used in jocose literal sense “one hundred and ten”, as in The Lord of the Rings: Bilbo Baggins’ eleventy-first birthday was his one hundred and eleventh); mumblety, used ...

See also:

Placeholder name, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for inanimate objects, Placeholder name - Kadigans in computing, Placeholder name - Other words used as kadigans, Placeholder name - Vulgar placeholder names, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for people, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for places, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for numbers, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for dates, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for times, Placeholder name - Kadigans in other languages, Placeholder name - Arabic, Placeholder name - Chinese, Placeholder name - Esperanto, Placeholder name - French, Placeholder name - German, Placeholder name - Hebrew, Placeholder name - Hungarian, Placeholder name - Italian, Placeholder name - Japanese, Placeholder name - Latin, Placeholder name - Malay, Placeholder name - Maori, Placeholder name - Polish, Placeholder name - Portuguese, Placeholder name - Quechua, Placeholder name - Russian, Placeholder name - Spanish, Placeholder name - Swedish, Placeholder name - Turkish, Placeholder name - Vietnamese, Placeholder name - Welsh, Placeholder name - Ubykh, Placeholder name - Yiddish, Placeholder name - Yoruba

Read more here: » Placeholder name: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for numbers

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Art theft - Individual theft

Many thieves are motivated by the fact that reasonably valuable art pieces are worth millions of dollars and weigh only a few kilograms, at most. Transportation is also trivial, assuming the thief is willing to inflict some damage to the painting by cutting it off the frame and rolling it up into a tube carrier. While most high-profile museums have extremely tight security, many places hosting multimillion dollar works have disproportionaly poor security measures. That makes them susceptible to thefts that are slightly more complicated than ...

See also:

Art theft, Art theft - Individual theft, Art theft - Famous cases of art theft, Art theft - The Mona Lisa 1911, Art theft - Panels from the Ghent Altarpiece 1934, Art theft - Last Judgment triptych by Memling 1473, Art theft - The Gardner Museum 1990, Art theft - Russborough House, Art theft - Stephane Breitwieser - The Art Collector ~2001, Art theft - Frankfurt art theft and Operation Cobalt 1994-2003, Art theft - Edvard Munch works 1994 2004 and 2005, Art theft - Saliera, Art theft - Theft during the Holocaust, Art theft - Recovery, Art theft - The portrayal of art theft in popular media, Art theft - Literature, Art theft - Film

Read more here: » Art theft: Encyclopedia II - Art theft - Individual theft

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Plot devices

Pulp Fiction - The mysterious briefcase. The only obvious observations about the stolen attaché case recovered by Jules and Vincent are that its latch lock combination is "666", the "number of the Beast" as given in the Biblical Book of Revelation, and that the contents of the case glow. Whenever asked, director Tarantino has replied that there is no explanation for the case's contents: it is simply a MacGuffin. The case is most likely a nod to Robert Aldrich's 1955 film noir Kiss Me Deadly, in which a si ...

See also:

Pulp Fiction, Pulp Fiction - Reception and influence, Pulp Fiction - Storylines, Pulp Fiction - Vincent & Jules, Pulp Fiction - Mia Wallace, Pulp Fiction - Butch Coolidge, Pulp Fiction - Pumpkin & Honey Bunny, Pulp Fiction - Plot devices, Pulp Fiction - The mysterious briefcase, Pulp Fiction - Jules' Bible passage, Pulp Fiction - Connections to Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction - Other details, Pulp Fiction - Time setting, Pulp Fiction - Influences, Pulp Fiction - Trivia, Pulp Fiction - Thematic analysis, Pulp Fiction - Cast

Read more here: » Pulp Fiction: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Plot devices

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Reception and influence

Pulp Fiction is perennially found both on critics' lists (such as the AFI's One Hundred Years, 100 Movies List) and in popular rankings, placing consistently in the top 20 on the IMDB Top 250 List. In 2000, readers of Total Film magazine voted it the 18th greatest comedy film of all time. In Britain (2001), it was voted as the 4th greatest film of all time in a nationwide poll for Channel 4, beaten only by The Shawshank Redemption, The Godfather and Star Wars. In 2005, Time.com named it one of the 100 best movies of the last 80 ...

See also:

Pulp Fiction, Pulp Fiction - Reception and influence, Pulp Fiction - Storylines, Pulp Fiction - Vincent & Jules, Pulp Fiction - Mia Wallace, Pulp Fiction - Butch Coolidge, Pulp Fiction - Pumpkin & Honey Bunny, Pulp Fiction - Plot devices, Pulp Fiction - The mysterious briefcase, Pulp Fiction - Jules' Bible passage, Pulp Fiction - Connections to Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction - Other details, Pulp Fiction - Time setting, Pulp Fiction - Influences, Pulp Fiction - Trivia, Pulp Fiction - Thematic analysis, Pulp Fiction - Cast

Read more here: » Pulp Fiction: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Reception and influence

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Slavoj Žižek - Critique

John Holbo of the National University of Singapore has criticized Žižek[1] for the latter's alleged refusal to lay out what, precisely, social formation he would replace the existing order with. Holbo argues that Žižek's "irrational" approach to thought disregards the ontic benefits brought about by late capital, specifically in its liberal-democratic form. By refusing to "play the game," as it were, and demanding leftist fidelity to a revolutionary ethic, Žižek is paradoxically demonstrating an unwillingness to face the consequences of political action (a p ...

See also:

Slavoj Žižek, Slavoj Žižek - The formation of the subject, Slavoj Žižek - The real the symbolic and the imaginary, Slavoj Žižek - The real, Slavoj Žižek - The symbolic, Slavoj Žižek - The imaginary, Slavoj Žižek - Postmodernism, Slavoj Žižek - Politicization, Slavoj Žižek - Critique, Slavoj Žižek - Works

Read more here: » Slavoj Žižek: Encyclopedia II - Slavoj Žižek - Critique

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Other details

Pulp Fiction - Time setting. Set in early-1990s Los Angeles, Pulp Fiction nevertheless lends itself a timeless quality by drawing on themes from most eras of the 20th century: Mia Wallace looks something like a silent film character from the 1920s or earlier—note her bobbed hair, which some have claimed is a reference to silent film star Louise Brooks. However, some of her scenes and the look of her character directly reference Anna Karina's character in Jean-Luc Godard's film My Life to ...

See also:

Pulp Fiction, Pulp Fiction - Reception and influence, Pulp Fiction - Storylines, Pulp Fiction - Vincent & Jules, Pulp Fiction - Mia Wallace, Pulp Fiction - Butch Coolidge, Pulp Fiction - Pumpkin & Honey Bunny, Pulp Fiction - Plot devices, Pulp Fiction - The mysterious briefcase, Pulp Fiction - Jules' Bible passage, Pulp Fiction - Connections to Reservoir Dogs, Pulp Fiction - Other details, Pulp Fiction - Time setting, Pulp Fiction - Influences, Pulp Fiction - Trivia, Pulp Fiction - Thematic analysis, Pulp Fiction - Cast

Read more here: » Pulp Fiction: Encyclopedia II - Pulp Fiction - Other details

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for inanimate objects

Common kadigans in the English language include: da' kine (Common in Hawaii) dealie or dealy dingus doobri or dooberry doodad doohickey doofer doover or dooverlacky efamijig frammis frobnitz gadget geemie gewgaw or geegaw gizmo gubbins ...

See also:

Placeholder name, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for inanimate objects, Placeholder name - Kadigans in computing, Placeholder name - Other words used as kadigans, Placeholder name - Vulgar placeholder names, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for people, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for places, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for numbers, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for dates, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for times, Placeholder name - Kadigans in other languages, Placeholder name - Arabic, Placeholder name - Chinese, Placeholder name - Esperanto, Placeholder name - French, Placeholder name - German, Placeholder name - Hebrew, Placeholder name - Hungarian, Placeholder name - Italian, Placeholder name - Japanese, Placeholder name - Latin, Placeholder name - Malay, Placeholder name - Maori, Placeholder name - Polish, Placeholder name - Portuguese, Placeholder name - Quechua, Placeholder name - Russian, Placeholder name - Spanish, Placeholder name - Swedish, Placeholder name - Turkish, Placeholder name - Vietnamese, Placeholder name - Welsh, Placeholder name - Ubykh, Placeholder name - Yiddish, Placeholder name - Yoruba

Read more here: » Placeholder name: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for inanimate objects

MacGuffin: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for places

In some forms of English, kadigans exist to represent places, particularly the stereotypical backward, insignificant or isolated town in the middle of nowhere. These include: Anytown, USA and Dullsville in the USA East Jabip/Jebip in the USA East Jesus in the USA (East/West) Bum(ble)fuck in the USA (somewhat impolite) Bumfuck Egypt or Butt-fuck Egypt (commonly abbreviated BFE, used in the Midwest of the USA) Dog River, Armpit< ...

See also:

Placeholder name, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for inanimate objects, Placeholder name - Kadigans in computing, Placeholder name - Other words used as kadigans, Placeholder name - Vulgar placeholder names, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for people, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for places, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for numbers, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for dates, Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for times, Placeholder name - Kadigans in other languages, Placeholder name - Arabic, Placeholder name - Chinese, Placeholder name - Esperanto, Placeholder name - French, Placeholder name - German, Placeholder name - Hebrew, Placeholder name - Hungarian, Placeholder name - Italian, Placeholder name - Japanese, Placeholder name - Latin, Placeholder name - Malay, Placeholder name - Maori, Placeholder name - Polish, Placeholder name - Portuguese, Placeholder name - Quechua, Placeholder name - Russian, Placeholder name - Spanish, Placeholder name - Swedish, Placeholder name - Turkish, Placeholder name - Vietnamese, Placeholder name - Welsh, Placeholder name - Ubykh, Placeholder name - Yiddish, Placeholder name - Yoruba

Read more here: » Placeholder name: Encyclopedia II - Placeholder name - Kadigans in the English language for places




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