Blow into the microphone so they fall over.
If you mean her friend she meets up with in the woods, he is Gale Hawthorne
Ickey Woods's birth name is Elbert Lee Woods.
Raulette Woods's birth name is Winfield Raulette Woods.
Jerome Woods's birth name is Jerome Harlan Woods.
Tulgey Woods is a fictional location from Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky" in the book "Through the Looking-Glass." As it is not a real place, you cannot physically get there. It exists only in the realm of literature and imagination.
The cast of The Tulgey Wood - 2005 includes: Ben Libby as Young Boy
In the context of Lewis Carroll's poem "Jabberwocky," the word "tulgey" is a nonsensical term that is used to evoke a sense of whimsy and absurdity. It does not have a specific meaning outside of the poem.
When Lewis Carrol wrote Jabberwocky, he employed a number of words which he made up himself. Some of these were what he called "portmanteau words" which contain parts of two words and combine their meanings. In Jabberwocky the verse in question goes And as in uffish thought he stood The Jabberwock, with eyes of flame Came whiffling through the tulgey wood And burbled as it came. "Tulgey" might be a portmanteau of turgid and bulgy. Or it might be just nonsense.
The likely pronunciation is as spelled : TULL-jee.The word 'tulgey' is not an actual English word, but was created for the poem Jabberwocky (1871) by Lewis Carroll.As Carroll neglected to offer a definition, its meaning is unknown.
Preposition. A+
chase someone in the woods
Penns Woods.
Tiger Woods
bear in woods
Penn's woods.
to camp in the woods.