Updated 05-May-2020.
Mondo shtuff from around the internet, all about CHESHIRE CAT!
Alice’s very weird wonderland: Why a behind-the-scenes row might see Tim Burton’s most fantastical film yet disappear from cinemas as fast as the Cheshire Cat: The word is that watching the film is the closest you can come to falling down the rabbit hole yourself and into Lewis Carroll’s fantasy world.
My botty best at summarizing from Wikipedia: the Cheshire Cat ( or ) is a fictional cat popularised by Lewis Carroll in Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland . known for its distinctive mischievous grin, the cat’s body disappears from view in 1853, Samuel Maunder offered an explanation for the phrase “lion rampant” this phrase owes its origin to the unhappy attempts of a sign painter to represent a lion . the resembl the first known appearance of the expression in literature is in the 18th century, in Grose, Francis (1788). A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue (Second, Corrected and Enlarged the phrase appears again in print in John Wolcot’s pair of Lyric Epistles (1792):”Lo, like a Cheshire cat our court will grin” a survey published in 2015 showed how highly no other english county has been honoured in this way or was accorded such unusually wide privileges . privileges attracted many who “arrived as fugitives from justice” in the middle ages wore on dictionaries show the word “caitiff” derived from Old French or Anglo-Norman . its diminutive “cat” meaning “a ‘sharp’ fellow”, as in the beat generation idiom in Carroll’s time Pusey was known as the Patristic Catenary (or chain), after the chain of authority of Church patriarchs . in mathematicians, Carroll would have been familiar with the other meaning before 1951, there were few post-Alice allusions to the character . images of and references to the Cheshire Cat cropped up with increasing frequency in the 1960s and 1970s . the Cheshire Cat appeared on LSD blotters, as well as in song lyrics and popular fiction . the animated character was voiced by Sterling Holloway (Alice in Wonderland) and Jim Cummings the Cheshire Cat appears in Walt Disney’s 2010 Alice in Wonderland . British actor Stephen Fry voices the character . in the movie, Cheshire binds the wound Alice suffered earlier by the Bandersnatch “Chess” impersonates the Hatter when the latter is sentenced to decapitation . in the video game adaptation of the movie, Chess is a playable character . an undetermined Che the late filmmaker Chris Marker gave his monumental documentary on the New Left movement of 1967–1977, Le fond de l’air est rouge (1977), the English title Grin Without a Cat. like the original, it signifie the Cheshire Cat appears as an avatar character in video games American McGee’s Alice (2000) and the sequel Alice: Madness Returns (2011) . his voice was provided by Roger L. Jackson, who also voiced the Mad the Cheshire Cat appears in sunsoft’s 2006 mobile game Alice’s Warped Wonderland . he serves as the guide to Ariko (the “Alice” of the game) and helps her chase after The the Cheshire Cat appears in Heart no Kuni no Alice as a young man named “Boris Airay” in the third volume of Shazam!, he is shown to live in the Magiclands location called the Wo the cat also appears in jasper fforde’s bookworld series . each eye sees two different views of the world and sends those images to the visual cortex . the “cheshire cat” effect occurs when one eye is fixated on a stationary object . the brain will focus on it, causing parts of the stationary object to fade away from vision entirely . catalytic RNAs the algae escape death (beheading) by means of disappearance (vanishing his head) “the Cheshire Cat” is a phenomenon in quantum mechanics in which a particle and its property behave as if they are separated researchers used an interferometer where neutron beams passed through silicon crystal . the crystal physically separated the neutrons and allowed them to go to two paths . a merger of galaxy groups in the constellation Ursa Major is Alice’ s Adventures: Lewis Carroll and Alice in Popular Culture. London: Continuum. ISBN 0-8264-1433-8. Gardner, Martin (1999). The Annotated Alice: Alice’s adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. W.W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-04847-0. Silvey, Anita (2002). ISBN 0-618-19082-1. “article on the Grappenhall carving”. “article about the Croft carving”. BBC.