No one in Salem was a witch.
vampires can actually turn into werewolves. its the truth (but folklore) Vampires can trans there body to werewolves as werewolves can trans themselfs to vampire. its called camouflage. vampires tend to turn themselves as werewolfs for disguise.
There is no specific event or time mentioned in any known narrative or folklore where the cat named Salem from "Sabrina the Teenage Witch" turns back into a human. Salem is portrayed as a magical cat who retains his feline form throughout the series.
When Argentina became independent they send a small number of Argentinians to the Falkland Islands. The British expelled them, and started a race themselfs. In 1806 when Argentina won independence the British tried to take Argentina and turn it to a British Colony but they lost.
no!! whoo actually thinks that people can turn into flamingos or whatever they want? that is so weird. people cant turn into raisins either. the end
People turn emo because their life was horrible and the dark side comes out so they turn emo
yes, they can turn blue.
Since 1930 it was in Salem, Massachusetts run by Parker Brothers. They sold it to General Mills that in turn sold it to Hasbro. About 1998 Hasbro moved it to Fitchburg, MA.
maybe it sensed that it wasnt as dark as it was an hour ago, there are two ways to turn your head lights on in a mercury grand marquis, at least my 92-93. you can pull the headlight switch which makes them stay on, or you can turn the small nob button to your right to do the light sense headlights. hope this helpsAnswerOverload in system? Circuit breaker cycling?
The White Witch allows Alsan to take Edmund's place at the stone table, and therefore allows both to live. Aslan knew that taking Edmund's place would turn back the punishment. If she had known this she would have gotten rid of Edmund, and may have also prevented the prophesy.
There is no proof that Medusa could not help but to turn people to stone.
Approximately 4,043,978 people turn 18 each year. Many of these teens are in the US. In contrast, 7,100 people in the US turn 65 each year.
No!