Blossom (voiced by Cathy Cavadini)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Powerpuff_Girls#Blossom
haki
Linda Grayson has written: 'The Flutter Blossom family and the Spring Fairy Faire' -- subject(s): Fiction, Fairies, Gardens
I am not exactly sure. I did it in Peach Blossom in 3rd grade. We got the highest score possible on my poem. I did it with My Dog does myy HW
The scene described in the poem "Under The Hazy Blossom laden sky" likely portrays a setting where the sky is filled with blossoms, creating a hazy and dreamy atmosphere. The imagery suggests a serene and tranquil environment, possibly with a sense of beauty and fragility. The poem may evoke feelings of peacefulness, nature's beauty, and the ephemeral nature of life.
I don't know what you think "Shakespearean language" is, but Shakespeare wrote in English. The particular expression you describe is not found in Shakespeare. Nor is the word "yeasty", but it means full of yeast, tasting of yeast, or like something full of yeast. One might talk about yeasty bread or yeasty beer. Figuratively it might mean ebullient, because of the froth and bubbles yeast gives off. "Canker-blossom" is used only once in Shakespeare, by Hermia talking to Helena "You juggler! You canker-blossom! You thief of love!" Hermia is mad because she thinks Helena has gone behind her back and alienated Lysander's affection, all the while seeming to be Hermia's friend. A canker is a worm; a canker-blossom is a flower that looks pretty but has a worm in its heart. This is a way of calling Helena a two-timer. "Horn-mad" appears a number of times in Shakespeare, in the plays A Comedy of Errors, The Merry Wives of Windsor and Much Ado about Nothing. In order to understand this expression, you need to know that cuckolds (men whose wives were unfaithful to them) were portrayed as having horns growing on their head. Almost every time you run across this word in an Elizabethan work it has this meaning either primarily or as a connotation. At the same time men at this time were constantly afraid that the women in their lives might cheat on them, and that they would have to suffer the social shame of being a cuckold, of "wearing the horns". Many of Shakespeare's plays (Othello, Cymbeline, The Winter's Tale, The Merry Wives of Windsor, Much Ado About Nothing) deal with totally unfounded accusations of infidelity by husbands against wives. A man driven insane by jealousy is horn-mad. A person who is horn-mad is unlikely to be a canker-blossom at the same time. For one thing, the former applies primarily to men, and the latter is more suited to a woman.
Blossom has: Played Blossom in "How I Began" in 1926. Played Blossom in "Home Construction" in 1926. Played Blossom in "The Loud Speaker" in 1926. Played Blossom in "Listening In" in 1927. Played Blossom in "Oscillation" in 1927. Played Blossom in "Broadcasting" in 1927.
On blossom, who the father
No, Blossom was played by Mayim Bialik.
Six LeMeure
six lemeure
Blossom Seeley has: Played herself in "Blossom Seeley and Bennie Fields" in 1928. Played Blossom Seeley in "Mr. Broadway" in 1933. Played Sybil Smith in "Broadway Thru a Keyhole" in 1933. Played Singer in "Blood Money" in 1933. Played herself in "All-Star Vaudeville" in 1935. Played Herself - Singer in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played herself in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played Vaudevillian in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played Singer in "Toast of the Town" in 1948. Played herself in "The Garry Moore Show" in 1958. Played herself in "The DuPont Show of the Week" in 1961. Played herself in "American Masters" in 1985.
Ryeland Allison has: Played Bully at Birthday Party in "Rhoda" in 1974. Played Neenja in "Wizards and Warriors" in 1983. Played Reggie in "Blossom" in 1990. Played Billy in "Blossom" in 1990. Played Repair Crew in "Gone for a Week" in 2002.
Megan McGinnis has: Played Girl in "Dear John" in 1988. Played Jennifer in "Blossom" in 1990. Played Susie in "Wings" in 1990. Played Susan in "Blossom" in 1990. Played Alison in "Sister, Sister" in 1994. Performed in "Strong Island Boys" in 1997. Played Choir Member in "Anywhere But Here" in 1999.
The possessive form for the noun blossom is blossom's.
Barbara Blossom has: Played Lydia in "American Playhouse" in 1981. Played Mme. Regine in "The House of Mirth" in 1981. Played Claire Weller in "Spenser: For Hire" in 1985. Played YMCA Visitor in "Mr. North" in 1988. Played Mrs. Eastman in "Race for Glory" in 1989. Played Waitress in "The Blue Diner" in 2001.
Autumn Winters has: Played Amy in "Doogie Howser, M.D." in 1989. Played Young Blossom in "Blossom" in 1990. Played Mickey Juba in "The Distinguished Gentleman" in 1992. Played 1st Girl in "Ring of the Musketeers" in 1992. Played Casey in "Ride with the Wind" in 1994. Played Blair in "ER" in 1994. Played Whitney in "V.I.P." in 1998.
hana is a blossom kaika suru is the verb to blossom