A device that hums when the string is pulled and dings when the string is released.
Humdinger is North American slang for something that is extraordinary or remarkable: a humdinger of a snowstorm.
Corbin Jones has: Played Boy Scout 2 in "Green Card Fever" in 2003. Played Bailey in "Separation Anxiety" in 2010. Played Jacob Marsh in "Life Beyond Death" in 2011. Played James in "So It Was with Us" in 2012. Played Jimmy in "Humdinger" in 2013.
There are loads of animals in Harry Potter. There's Hedwig, Scabbers the rat (aka peter pettigrew), Crookshanks the cat, Fang the dog, hippogriffs, blast-ended skrewts, some type of worm (maybe flubberworms), some kind of thing that looks like a twig and is pretty vicious, threstrals, gnomes, Aragon the gigantic spider, Norberta the dragon (originally named norbert until it is discovered that the he is actually a she), the Hungarian Horntail, the Chinese fireball dragon, welsh green, another dragon, Nagini the snake, dementors, centaurs, unicorns, and thts all i remember right off hand.
Anita Bayless has: Played Wilma in "Lux Video Theatre" in 1950. Performed in "Robert Montgomery Presents" in 1950. Played Miss Appleby in "Robert Montgomery Presents" in 1950. Played Mrs. Conners in "Lux Video Theatre" in 1950. Performed in "Mr. Citizen" in 1955.
duhickey humdinger
The Humdinger was created in 2005.
Humdinger is North American slang for something that is extraordinary or remarkable: a humdinger of a snowstorm.
duhickey humdinger
A humdinger is a compound machine that hums when you pull a string and dings when you let go of the string.
The Humdinger - 1926 is rated/received certificates of: USA:Passed (National Board of Review)
Ignore her.
Cranium
You will need a larger resonator for that.
The cast of The Humdinger - 1926 includes: Johnny Arthur as Johnny - the Small Town Boob George Davis as The Traveling Salesman Anita Garvin as The Vamp
The cast of Humdinger - 2013 includes: Corbin Jones as Jimmy Brant Jones as Police Chief Mahmoud Osman as Mike Barbie Papalios as Aunt Beth
The origin of the word "humdinger" is uncertain, but it is believed to have emerged in the United States around the late 19th or early 20th century. Its exact etymology is unclear, but it is commonly used to describe something remarkable, outstanding, or exceptional.