It depends on the sizes of the clowns and the size of the clown car. Depending on the car size, from 4 to 8 actual occupants were squeezed into the car.
However, a backdrop, chute, or other ploy would be used to allow more to enter (relatively unseen) from the rear, giving the illusion that a dozen, two dozen, or more, were originally inside the car.
It all depends on the size of the car and clowns, for example, If you had a hummer, or a landrover sport, and your clowns were very small, you could fit lots of them in. Whereas if the car you had was a mini cooper, or a Nissan micra for example, and your clowns were very large, you would not be able to fit many in. Therefore there is no real answer for this question, it all depends on the circumstance in which your investigation takes place.
One
Not everyone loves clowns. In fact clowns are one of the most common fears that people have since Stephen King's It was released.
Coulrophobia is the fear of clowns.
Killer clowns is in jail now.
A Squadron. Eg "Run! a Squadron of clowns are apporaching"
It is not a sentence. What are the clowns doing? You must have a noun AND a verb to make a sentence.
i guess it is 18
36 clowns divided by 2 rows = 18 clowns per row.
No french fries have nothing to do with clowns
Depends on the size and enthusiasm of the clowns involved.
There are many names... But if you are tired of the big braggers, and look for a strong upcomer, it would be Leif Strand. hard and ruthless, makes clowns look like clowns.
26 clowns
56
Not everyone loves clowns. In fact clowns are one of the most common fears that people have since Stephen King's It was released.
There have been very few documented cases of people being killed by clowns. While there have been isolated incidents of violence involving individuals dressed as clowns, the overall risk of being killed by a clown is extremely low.
Nine
clowns! clowns! clowns!
In Irish:cábóga (clodhoppers, clowns)gamal (louts, fools, simpletons)In the theatrical sense:áilteoirí (clowns)amhlóirí (clowns)bobaidí (clowns)In Scottish Gaelic: ?