They were a long -running juvenile novel series, alledgedly written by one Laura Lee Hope. ( there was no such author) a team of authors was employed. they dealt with two sets of fraternal twins in the harmonious happy family setting only found in such types of fiction. In series production for gosh- at least seventy years, there were periodic updatings on transportation devices and so on- but the plots still culturally lagged. The yarn about the Bicycle trip could not have taken place later than the twenties- but was still being printed in the seventies- and Not as nostalgia or a period novel like some of the Am erican Girl stories tied in with the dolls. so it went. Generally harmless fun and almost always adults, authority types, police, etc- shown in a favorable light. again harmless escapist fun for kids- something we don"t have much of today with Harry Potter on an opposite rudder ( he"s an orphan and a Magic practitioner as well) No Occult elements in Bobbsey, Thank Heavens.
Bert Bobbsey's twin is Nan Bobbsey. They are siblings and are part of the Bobbsey family featured in the Bobbsey Twins book series.
You are referring to the parents of the Bobbsey family. the daughters would be Flossie ( the youngest) and Nan ( presumably a variant on Anne) the older. Oddly my Mother, who was named Anne, had a Dog as a child named- of all things, Flossie. woof woof.
bobsey twins keeping house, what is value
The older set of twins were Bert and Nan, the younger twins were Freddie and Flossie.
The first Bobbsey Twins books was written in 1904. The last in the series was published in 1979. Laura Lee Hope was a "house name" and Stratemeyer Syndicate hired multiple authors to write the books.
The Bobbsey Twins exist as protagonists in Statemeyer Syndicate's longest-running series of children's books. The books were first published in 1904 and ended it's run after many restarts in 1992.
The Hardy Boys is a creation of the Stratemeyer Syndicate, the creators of dozens of successful book series such as the Rover Boys, the Bobbsey Twins and Tom Swift, and later, Nancy Drew. They were written by various people over the years.
Your question is somewhat ambiguous ( appropriate term ah so). One basic rule is that almost always, as with any identical twins, they take the same gender, either both boys or both girls. No mixed genders - like the fictional Bobbsey Twins , a boy and a girl ( Fraternal twins can be this type, but not identical or Siamese. also, generally they are conjoined at the hip, or as one Carnival Barker put it ( In the Gunsmoke posture!) There are other joining bands, also. The Girls can be beautiful
I think you are referring to the one and very off-base scene in one of the Bobbsey Twins novels- I believe the first one-The Bobbsey Twins of Lakeport, where an unnamed and unidentified burglar attempts to break in to their apartment, and trips over something, maybe flower pots, on the fire escape. the rest of the story- this being the concluding chapter is entirely (family friendly) and fun stuff, the burglar- he is not identified and it is not clear he dies in the fall. at any rate he doesn"t intrude again.This was the only instance of urban crime in the popular juvenile series which exaggerated positive relatively affluent urban life- with some rural detours.
The correct term is "set of twins." This refers to the two individuals born at the same time and is commonly used to describe multiple pairs. "Pair of twins" is less common and can be confusing, as "twins" already implies a pair.
Gemini is the Latin word to describe the twins Castor and Pollux. They also appear in Green mythology as the "Dioscuri".
A set of twins (2 babies) is called twins. Seven sets would still be twins. 7 babies born together (not twins) would be called septuplets.