They are Quarter horses and Arabian
The rated-Arr! movies.
Mostly Egg Movies
ice age? (:
Silent Movies were popular because they were the only kind of movies until the late 20's when synchronized sound became mainstream.
Movies that kids would like that are in theaters right now are: The Adventures of Tin Tin, Alvin and the Chipmunks:Chipwrecked, and We Bought a Zoo
Mystery
adventure and mystery
If you meant what kind of nose did he have, hawk-like is the description given by Conan Doyle
It is kind of difficult to pin down an answer for this question. None of the crimes "should have happened," and I am certain many other things (i.e., the deaths of Mary Morstan Watson and Sherlock Holmes (temporarily in the case of the latter).
The Sherlock Holmes stories were mostly written from a first-person perspective from the point of view of Watson writing about them. There were some exceptions, however, and there was that one story that was written by Holmes when Watson got tired of him complaining about the way he wrote them and challenged him to write one out himself.
Sherlock is a consulting detective, one of his kind. He is a fictional character created by Arthur Conan Doyle. There are many movies about him but a series, named "Sherlock", by Benedict Cumberbatch is too intense.
"The Adventure of the Speckled Band", where the instrument of murder was a venomous snake. ------ It is more properly ophiology.
it was a cheap tourist souvenir replica of a 19th century sword stick. they were made in India in the 1950s to 60s
In "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" from 1939, Basil Rathbone dresses as a "music hall chap," and sings a rendition of "I Do Like to Be Beside the Seaside". This was a popular British music hall song written by John A. Glover-Kind in 1907.
A hansom cab, it is a kind of horse drawn carriage. ------ There were two-wheelers (Hansom and trap), four wheelers (dog-cart, landau, and 'bus [ominbus]), and trains all of which Sherlock Holmes may have used at times. Of course, he sometimes enjoyed walking. The Brougham and Barouche were used by a select few of Holmes' clients although Mycroft Holmes picked up Watson in a brougham in 'The Final Problem.' Please see the link below.
Holmes read learned treatise on medicine and crime. He kept current on the news in several papers. His favorite reading were the personal or agony columns in the newspapers.
Conan Doyle wrote in 'The Boscombe Valley Mystery' the following description of Holmes' attire: "travelling-cloak and close-fitting cloth cap," which Sidney Paget, the illustrator in the early Strand Magazine stories, interpreted as an Inverness cape and deerstalker cap. These were often used as travelling clothes in Holmes' day, and Holmes and Watson had travelled to the Boscombe valley. This outfit has since been made popular by actors such as William Gillette and Basil Rathbone in Sherlock Holmes adaptations.