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William Hyde wrote:Didn't Lummox have four legs and two arms ? Not quite a dinosaur. And her family put her on a severe diet.Don wrote:London honorific protocol is above my pay grade. My own, homegrown,James Nicoll wrote:>Five Stories That Know Everything's Better With Dinosaurs>
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From time travel to alternate timelines, science fiction authors keep
finding novel ways to bring us into contact with dinosaurs--some
friendly, others not so much.
>
https://reactormag.com/five-stories-that-know-everythings-better-with-dinosaurs/
_The Lost World_ by Arthur Conan Doyle
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... Modern readers curious about Edwardian-era ... virulent bigotry
need look no further than this novel.
>
No doubt, James. Initiate of the United Grand Lodge of England, Sir Dr
Doyle,
>
I believe the correct order is "Dr Sir".
thrown together titular rule of thumb puts the rarest title first.
There once was a Denver newspaper invested in London custom. Only
seven Scot knights (with the title Sir) reside in North America, they
said.
It seems to me the most exalted title comes first. The Senator
Doctor from Wyoming, for instance. The Senator Doctor occasionally
catches me taking a break at one end of his long driveway during my
spins up the mountain: <https://crcomp.net/arts/spintale/index.php> He
always acts affable and good-natured about it.
Dorothy used to write about "The Star Beast." The Lummox may qualify as
distinctly dinosaur in demeanor.
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