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Mr. Christmas (Mr. Men & Little Miss Celebrations)

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Ambiguously Human: The Mr. Men and Little Misses are visually a fantastic race of colorful Living Polyhedrons, but they apparently are human beings. If anything, they look like actual human beings in-universe, but look like talking shapes to us since they're meant to be representations of the virtues and vices anyone in real life can have. Mr. Mean is renamed Mr. Stingy in North American editions to clarify that he is mean with his money rather than mean to other people (though he has moments of the latter as well). It was very nice to see you," said Mr. Fussy politely. But what he was thinking was "it's very nice to see you going". I Shall Taunt You: Missy constantly taunts Dr. Twelfth for being "old and slow" during The Chase. This figures into her Evil Plan in that goading him into trying to catch her is a way of distracting him from noticing she's leaving Cybermats in her wake. Even Evil Has Standards: Mr. Brawler/Mr. Crosspatch may be violent, but he knows that it's wrong to hit a woman.

Birthday Episode: Dr. Thirteenth has her, Graham, and Ryan putting together a Surprise Party for Yaz's birthday. Mr. Wrong (last appearance) (cameo, light blue instead of red, and without any accessories, then later appears with his correct colours in the Flying song when he's in a train) Foul Flower: Mr. Grumpy has an aversion to flowers, and pulls up any pretty flowers growing in the garden of his home, Crosspatch cottage. Mr. Muddle is so named because everything he does ends up in a hopeless muddle. He wanted to live in the countryside but got muddled and built his house by the seaside instead, and when he tries to make a roast dinner of turkey, potatoes, peas, and gravy, he puts the turkey in the cupboard to cook and the potatoes in the fridge to boil, then peels the peas and tries to slice the gravy.Giant Food: In Mr. Greedy, the title character visits a giant's castle and finds a plate of sausages the size of sofas, potatoes the size of beach balls, and peas the size of cabbages. Mr. Clever's book has him walking home in sadness due to not feeling quite as clever as he thought he was, then to add insult to injury it turns out that he's going in the wrong direction.

Snowlems: Mr. Snow is a snowman brought to life by Father Christmas ( Santa Claus in the American version) to help him deliver presents; at the end of the book, the narrator claims that Father Christmas revives Mr. Snow via a different snowman every Christmas. Averted by Mr. Mean, who has lots of money, but (although not stated in the text) is far too mean to invest in a china piggy bank: instead he keeps his money in a plain wooden box in the kitchen.Mr. Strong has a huge appetite, but only for one food - eggs, the source of his incredible physical strength. Retcon: Mr. Snooty is described as the rudest person, though this was changed to "second" rudest once Mr. Rude was added. Mr. Mean sends his brother a piece of coal for Christmas. When Mr. Mean reforms and becomes generous at the end of the book, what does he send his brother? Two pieces of coal. Christmas Surprise! (the first appearance of Tenth) was released on its own between Waves Two and Three, and Dr. Thirteenth after Wave Three to coincide with her first formal episode.

Christmas Episode: Dr. Tenth — Christmas Surprise!, a hardcover installment featuring him and Donna Noble that was released a few months prior to his main series book. Mr. Jelly is called Mr. Nervous in the USA and Canada since "jelly" in those countries refers not to the wobbly, gelatin-based dessert but to a form of fruit preserve made from boiled fruit juice and sugar, so it doesn't carry the same association with nervousness. This name change made it into one adaptation in both territories. Little Miss Helpful. She's the type who always wants to help, but only makes the situation much worse by doing so.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 Interactive Narrator: In the 1983 adaptation of Little Miss Plump, she briefly interacts with the narrator by telling him it's easy to say "Sixty six succulent sizzling sausages".

Giant Spider: Dr. Eleventh and River Song have to flee one of these (for the second time that day!) as part of their quest. Miseryland is ruled by a King, not a Queen as said in Little Miss Sunshine. In addition, Miseryland had been renamed to Laughter Land, unless of course, the Queen is still as miserable as her husband before. The stinger for where Mr. Right goes to bed at the end of the story, after Mr. Wrong has been living with him. In the bath.

Both Mr Impossible's Lesson and Little Miss Shy And The Fairy Godmother involve Little Miss Shy being put through a gratuitous act of cruelty from one of the meaner characters (Mr. Snooty in the former, and Little Miss Bossy and Little Miss Naughty in the latter) and getting help via magical means. The key difference is that in the former, Mr. Snooty shows some honor at the end and thanks her along with Mr. Bump and Mr. Clumsy for preventing his house from burning down while in the latter, Little Miss Bossy and Little Miss Naughty receive little, if any repercussions for bullying Little Miss Shy for blushing. Limited Special Ultimate Collector's Edition: Dr. Thirteenth arrived to coincide with the debut of her television counterpart, and thus was initially published as a larger-sized "Limited Edition" hardcover with gold foil detailing on a teal cover (it also had the actual Doctor Who logo on the front, another change from the others). While Christmas Surprise! was also a hardcover, it was otherwise a standard-format book. Lighter and Softer: While Doctor Who has long been handled as a children's (in its original 1963-89 run) or family show (2005-onwards), it's rarely shied away from violent action, suspense, and outright horror elements. By design, this series presents a cuddlier version of the various heroes and villains, though there's a lot of deadly peril in each one and Never Say "Die" is averted. Unspoken Retort: Mr. Clumsy causes total mayhem at Mr. Fussy's neat and tidy house for two weeks. When Mr. Clumsy moves on, Mr. Fussy says politely "It was very nice to see you", but the narrative says that he is thinking is "It's very nice to see you going".

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