Matilda
Mrs. Trunchbull was Roald Dahl's favorite character because she inspired him to get the story funny and add a little bit of action.
Miss Honey is the nicest and Miss Trunchbull is the meanest.
Yes, Roald Dahl's characters are often based on people he knew or encountered in his life. For example, the character of Miss Trunchbull in "Matilda" is said to be inspired by a real-life headmistress that Dahl had a negative experience with as a child.
In "Matilda" by Roald Dahl, Amanda Thripp is the character who gets thrown by her pigtails by Miss Trunchbull. Miss Trunchbull does this as a form of punishment for Amanda's pigtails being "unsightly."
Miss Trunchbull is the name of the Headmistress
Roald Dahl never had a favorite word,but he had a motto: My candle burns at Both ends.it will not last the night. But oh my foes and oh my friends. It gives a lovely light.
In Roald Dahl's novel "Matilda," Miss Trunchbull, the formidable headmistress, punished the boy who couldn't spell the word "what" by making him eat an entire chocolate cake in front of the whole school. This punishment was meant to be both humiliating and excessive, reflecting Miss Trunchbull's cruel and tyrannical nature as a character. The scene serves to highlight the absurdity and injustice of her disciplinary methods within the story.
Roald Dahl's goat was named Alfie. It lived in his garden and would eat roses.
Roald Dahl did not create Cinderella. Cinderella is a fairy tale that originated long before Dahl's time. Dahl was a children's book author who wrote popular stories such as "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and "Matilda."
The boy's name who ate the cake in the book Matilda by Roald Dahl is Bruce Bogtrotter. He was forced by the terrifying Miss Trunchbull to eat a whole chocolate cake as punishment.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was written by Roald Dahl.
I think Roald Dahl is using this story to talk about how children are brought up in different families.