probably as this is an acknowledged ( English) Christmas song. however in popular usage the last scene where all are engaged in ( Singing a Christmas Carol) the popular idea- in the book no specific song is stated is the very ( democratic) and easy-to-sing Silent Night, Holy Night. ( of German origin). (gentlemen) is an English song. draw your own conclusions!
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, a GREAT movie... better than the rest!
Good question! The inventor created Edward to make a "Perfect gentlemen". Edward is created, so he is not human, but he takes the form of one and talks like one. The inventor I don't believe has a true meaning for making Edward, I think it was just to create a perfect gentlemen and to see if it was possible. If the inventor wouldn't have died, Edward would have been completed and have a good start in life. But since he (The inventor) died, Edward is confused and stays at the castle for the rest of his life without real hands. I hope I could answer your question!
Ronald Reagan
At the end during the credits
The first one is I don't know about the rest. You can watch the first movie and all the other ones on narutoget.com.
Scrooge does not like the Christmas carol "God Rest Ye Merry, Gentlemen" in Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol."
God rest ye merry gentlemen
"God Rest Thee Merry Gentlemen" (which is also called "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen").
God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen!
God rest ye Merry Gentlemen
it goes, "God rest ye merry gentlemen"
Yes, there is a popular Christmas carol called, "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen."
"God rest ye merry gentlemen". You can usually google a song's lyrics, and google will pop up a page with the song title.
God rest ye merry gentlemen
The carolers outside of Scrooge's office in "A Christmas Carol" were likely a group of singers from the community or hired by the production. The specific characters or performers may vary depending on the production or adaptation of the story.
anon
The Scrooge character - actually ( A Christmas Carol) but everybody calls it Scrooge (there are so many Christmas carols- actually the title tune is NOT identified but is probably either ( God Rest ye Merry Gentlemen) - as that is English, or Silent Night, Holy Night, which is ( congregational or popular- in a sense a Folk song with a Christmas bent- which it was. Tiny Tim does not, to my knowledge, die in the Scrooge story.