This thread is for tropers who have trouble with English and would like some help with the crazy grammar of this crazy language.
Write down what you wish to edit on the wiki. If you have been suspended from editing, another troper might be kind enough to edit for you after your suggestions have been corrected.
The thread is for help and feedback on your own suggested edits.
If you want help correcting other people's edits (e.g., if you find a page which seems to have grammar problems but want a second opinion, or you don't feel able to fix it by yourself) then that's off-topic here, but we have a separate Grammar Police cleanup thread
that can provide assistance.
Edited by Mrph1 on Nov 16th 2023 at 5:37:57 PM
Something I want to add to Lady and the Tramp once I get editing privileges back...
- Didn't Think This Through: At the zoo, Tramp sees an alligator and thinks he can gnaw Lady's muzzle off. But Tramp doesn't realize until the last second that alligators have massive jaws with many sharp teeth, and pulls Lady away just in time.
Tramp: Say, Al, do you suppose you could nip this contraption off for us?Alligator: (in a deep, echoing voice) Glad to oblige! (opens his mouth wide)Tramp: Whoa, WHOA! (pulls Lady away right before the alligator snaps his jaws shut)
@Melinda
Agent Smith's mind control powers...Stealth is about...a well-deserved No-Holds-Barred...
When The Cerebrus armor...voice, <- comma it...
^ Is the armor called "The Cerebrus" or just "Cerebrus"? If just "Cerebrus", it should be "When the Cerebrus armor...".
...who apparently got promoted...
In the book, Coker kidnaps people to make them help refugees blinded by a meteor shower, <- commaand...without kidnapping or misleading anyone.
^ As written, the first sentence could have been interpreted to mean that Coker was kidnapping people to make them help blind the refugees, not help refugees who were already blind.
...are last seen shooting at the triffids or...
^ On our The Day of the Triffids page, the word "triffid" is consistently not capitalized. This is also true on The Other Wiki's page on the film
. That's because "triffid" is a common noun, not a proper noun
.
...they are submerged when everyone else loses their sight and...
...vulnerable to the attacking triffids. He...chance, <- comma and eventually succeeds.
...when the meteorites blinded most of the world, <- comma but...
Matt's efforts...are one...on his own...
...are also seen happily dancing to Springsteen.
Edited by Arivne on May 26th 2022 at 5:39:13 AM
Thanks @ Tom Swift
- Men of Sherwood
- About half the books in the second series end with a villain's base being swarmed by either a party of Swift Enterprises guards and workers or local authorities (generally composed largely of unnamed and/or One Shot Characters), who easily defeat the antagonists and sometimes rescue a captive Tom.
- In the fourth series, Harlan Ames and his security force are generally formidable enough to deter attacks on the plant with their mere presence, and even when they don't, they're nothing to scoff at in a fight.
- In Quantum Force, some mercenary commandoes do briefly make it into the base due to having face field technology and an inside source, but as soon as Tom disables the force fields Ames and his men quickly gun down or capture the mercenaries.
- Almost all of the guards who accompany the Swifts to field test a new invention are gunned down, but some go down fighting, and the two survivors, including Harlan, are blazing away throughout their retreat. Later, when the Black Dragon has an army teleport into the Swifts' complex, the guards do an effective job of fighting the intruders and protecting the heroes, and win handily. Unfortunately, this becomes a Pyrrhic Victory when the Black Dragon then uses his time machine to teleport his surviving men into an unstable device to make it blow up and kill a scientist everyone is trying to protect.
- Reasonable Authority Figure: Most of the government officials Tom and his dad market their inventions to have good uses for the devices and are fair-minded about any difficulties. Some, like Peter Newell from Monster Machine, even tag along on adventures.
- Screw This, I'm Outta Here!: Villains often flee or try to flee when things go bad. A great example is in Tom Swift and his Electric Railroad, where the villains see Tom's gigantic associate Koku walking up while carrying the unconscious Dragon over his arm without any effort or difficulty.
Big Bad: Get him!Random Mook: Get your grandmother.All of the mooks flee.
- Thrown from the Zeppelin: After the gangsters murder Big Jim (The Don) in the opening scene, they hold a meeting to pick his successor. One man suggests just drawing names from a hat. Gisborne (who organized the murder of Big Jim) makes it clear that the meeting is just a formality to declare that he's the new boss and threatens to kill the man who suggested drawing names (although he ultimately doesn't).
- Author's Saving Throw: The absence of submarine crews, who would likely avoid the blinding meteorites because they were underwater and could act as a remnant of civil and military authority, was a minor source of criticism toward the book. Here, such characters do appear.
- The opening scene shows a break-in at a government building with the words "secret lab" in neon lights outside.
- An Intrepid Reporter type talks about how he wants the spotlight so badly that he's braving a war zone, only for a cardboard cutout of the Yookia/Zookia border to fall over and reveal he's still in his studio. His studio quickly claims to be having technical difficulties.
- Sam's "perfect plan" to find his mom in East Flurbia is getting up high and yelling at her with a megaphone.
- Disguised in Drag: The Dragon in The Secret of Fort Pioneer commits an act of sabotage while disguised as a female extra in a western movie.
- Invented Individual: The Backstory of The Secret of Fort Pioneer involves a cavalry fort where soldiers who were too lazy for guard duty put a scarecrow that they called Sergeant Silicoe on the walls of the fort to fill their shifts. The officers found out but thought it was hilarious and allowed it to continue. An official record even noted how Sergeant Silicoe was shot through the head with an arrow but wasn't hurt and could stand guard the next day.
- Red Herring: Most villains are Obviously Evil but not every suspicious character is a villain.
- Ol' Whiskers from The Secret of Hermit's Peak waves around his gun and threatens anyone who ventures near the peak, however good their motives are. However, his gun is unloaded, he's the rightful owner, and he isn't working for the bad guys. He just wants to be left alone.
- In The Phantom of Wolf Creek, the Conrad family is being targeted by hostile thieves, one of whom is a Cold Sniper. Their neighbor Mr. Burkhart, who is an expert marksman and from a rival feuding family, and his thuggish ranch hand Redneck Butler are both innocent. Surly and secretive Conrad cowboy Wily Lank is also innocent, and is merely being blackmailed by the villains.
- In The Secret of Fort Pioneer, a movie set is plagued by a threatening archer and costly pranks/sabotage. Suspicion falls on Doc Rile, one of the few archers in the area and a practical joker who says he moved to New Mexico for his health but looks healthy. His pranks are of the harmless variety, and the arrows that keep missing the main cast are being fired from a spear gun rather than a bow.
- Halloran from the Mystery of Bandit Gulch is an angry and unhelpful guy until the climax, but he's just bitter and paranoid about the locals after being cheated in a real estate scam.
Edited by Melinda on May 26th 2022 at 8:52:29 AM
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Funny/TeamFortress2CommunityCreatedContent
- Reddit user u/Aenigmatrix
has been working on Minecraft-ified versions of the "Meet the Team" videos with character models based on hololive.
- Meet the Heavy
- Luna Himemori
- Meet the Soldier
- Robocco
- Meet the Engineer
- Kaela Kovlavskia
- Meet the Demoman
- Marine Houshou
- Meet the Scout
- Ayunda Risu
- Meet the Heavy
I have to link the reddit pages since there aren't any Youtube links.
For Past Experience Nightmare Visual Novels:
- Missing Parts The Tantei Stories: The poor Kyosuke Magami suffers this at the beginning of the fourth case after the horrendously depressing incident at the end of Case 3 "The Entrusted Paper Knife" (even if you get the Rank A ending), where he learns that the murderer of some of Teppei's delinquent friends was Liangxue Li, who was mind-manipulated or brainwashed by Yikai Wei. Kyosuke watches Liangxue dying in his arms after she's mortally wounded in her chest when Yikai attempts to kill him with a gun and gets away scot-free with his helicopter, right after Liangxue was freed from mind-control through The Power of Love. He gets better.
Edited by Minorica on May 28th 2022 at 10:44:25 PM
"No matter how bad the heroes can get or how bad the situation is, we're sure we can overcome it and get our happy endings..."https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/DragaliaLostChapter25
- Assimilation Plot: Xenos's plot involves merging all alternate worlds and timelines into one.
- Call-Back: When talking about severing causality links, Euden and Zethia can remember Audric, the alternate timeline version of their father, though Notte has a hard time remembering who he was.
- Deader than Dead: When Elysium was killed in the previous chapter, he was killed across all worlds. This chapter also allows Euden to permanently kill Morsayati once and for all after Zena purges him from Emperor Euden.
Edited by kawaiineko333 on May 26th 2022 at 1:12:24 PM
For FanPreferredCouple.Live Action TV:
- Dracula (2013): Despite the show being built around a Reincarnation Romance between Dracula and Mina, far more fans of this version ship her with her best friend, Lucy. This is mainly because this version of Lucy is a fan favorite, as well as a an actual lesbian in the show, who has a one sided crush on Mina. The fact that Lucy is played by fangirl favorite actress Katie McGrath is also a major factor in these fan's shipping them as well.
Any corrections?
Edited by Bullman on May 25th 2022 at 2:06:22 PM
Fan-Preferred Couple cleanup thread
@Melinda
...being swarmed by other a party of...composed largely of...
...don't, they're nothing to scoff at in a fight.
...due to having force field technology...force fields, <- comma Ames...
...but some go down fighting, <- comma and...Harlan, <- comma are...and win handily. <- period Unfortunately, this...Black Dragon then uses...
Some, like Peter Newell from Monster Machine, even tag along on adventures.
A great example is in Tom Swift and his Electric Railroad, <- comma where...
After the gangsters murder Big Jim (The Don) <- parentheses in...
The opening scene shows a break-in at a government building...
^ When used as a verb, it's "break in". As a noun, it's "break-in".
...cardboard cutout of the Yookia/Zookia boded to fall over...studio. His studio quickly claims...
^ "boded" is not correct English.
Ol' Whiskers...
^ Unless his first name is "Ol", "Ol" is short for "Old" and needs an apostrophe to show that it's been shortened.
His pranks are of the harmless variety, <- comma and...
Edited by Arivne on May 26th 2022 at 5:59:23 AM
@Minorica
Poor Kyosuke Magami suffers this at most of his sleeps...incident at the...he learns that the murderer of some of Teppei's delinquent friends...Kyosuke can't help but watches Liangxue dying in his...she is mortally ...Yikai attempts to...and gets away...
^ "at most of his sleeps" is not correct English.
@Bullman
...fan favorite <- no comma as well as a an actual lesbian in the show...The fact that Lucy is played by fangirl favorite actress Katie McGrath is also a major factor in these fan's shipping them as well.
^ "also" means the same thing as "as well", so one of them is redundant. You could delete "also" instead of "as well".
Edited by Arivne on May 26th 2022 at 6:12:34 AM
@ Z Nation Fanon Discontinuity
- Each new season makes poor use of at least some characters and plot elements introduced in the previous one, to the point where there are fans who would prefer not to acknowledge anything after one season finale or another due to liking what came just before it.
- He's Just Hiding:
- Despite Brian considering himself the last survivor of his plane crash, the way it happens at night makes it possible that he might have missed someone else in the water, like the mother and baby.
- Although Brian, Daniel’s son, and the other soldiers and refugees seem doomed in the Bolivian Army Ending, many fans like to think they somehow escaped.
- One-Scene Wonder:
- The kindly old Zombie Infectee that tells Daniel where his family went.
- The Wasteland Elder and Man of the City army officer who is protecting his home village and provided some sage words to Daniel.
- Frank, the officer who Brian wants to be his Voice with an Internet Connection. His actor does a great job of acting determined and haunted, but apologetic as he makes it clear he can’t help Brian and only has bad news for him.
- Man of the City: Brian and Daniel encounter an army officer who is leading sevearal men in defending their hometown. The officer is determined to keep his people safe, but also refuses to evacuate to a better-defended area (although it turns out to be a Safe Zone Hope Spot) due to his connection with the area and determination to help the village survive along with its residents.
- Safe Zone Hope Spot:
- The military base the heroes spend most of the film traveling to turns out to be surrounded by zombies, who are weakening the walls while the soldiers inside are almost out of bullets.
- The United States of America turns out to be a national example, as Brian thinks it is safe from zombies and his government can send a plane to rescue him, but the nation has severe zombie problems of its own.
- Ultimate Job Security: In The Secret of Fort Pioneer, west coast, Idle Rich, out-of-town blowhard Nick Holloway gets a job as a Mauve Shirt character in a western movie and proves to be an incompetent, lazy troublemaker who is Hated by All. The director repeatedly tries to fire him, but is reminded that Nick has already filmed a lot of footage and it will be expensive to re-shoot them if they recast his role. The day that he wraps up, he's kicked off the set. Of course, the assistant director making the arguments about why they need Nick is conspiring with Nick to find some buried treasure that legally belongs to the government, so he has a vested interest in keeping Nick around.
- Disappeared Dad: Gertie mentions that her parents are divorced and her dad left.
- The young Jedi himself gets some credit for managing to escape from three Inquisitors even after being wounded and cornered.
Edited by Melinda on May 27th 2022 at 2:34:21 AM
Hi fellas. It's me again. Let's have another try.
A Headscratcher for Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022):
- Peter Pan is depicted as having aged after appearing in Peter Pan and Flounder is depicted as looking the same he did in The Little Mermaid when he was kidnapped by the Valley Gang. Shouldn't this create a few contradictions regardless their appearances in other media? Peter was depicted still a child in Return to Never Land, The Lion King 1 ½ and Jake and the Never Land Pirates and Flounder was depicted as an adult fish in The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea, in addition to his other appearances as a young fish in The Little Mermaid (1992) and The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning. And don't forget the appearances of the two in House of Mouse. Then who played them in these productions?
And a trope for Joe Johnston:
- What Could Have Been: He was originally going to direct a film adaptation of The Silver Chair as the fourth installment and Soft Reboot of The Chronicles of Narnia film series. However, the project never materialized.
Edited by ElJuaco on May 26th 2022 at 12:17:45 PM
https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Characters/HololiveEnglishGenerationTwoCouncil
Folder->Fauna Ceres
- Pop-Cultural Osmosis Failure: During a Peglin stream, she confesses she's unaware of what the morbin meme is
from Morbius (2022). It's later in the stream she watches the Fubuki/Jared Leto interview and asks if anyone's actually seen the movie.
I've been told in order to regain editing permissions, I must submit the edits I wish to make here until I've given an example that contains no grammatical errors. As such I would appreciate it if somebody looked over the comment I made a few days ago and checked over this edit I propose for the Pokemon Anime's Broken Base page
, specifically, the Sun & Moon section.
"Does Ash's Characterization in this show count as Character Rerailment or Character Derailment? Those in the former camp feel that XY&Z was an overcorrection to Ash's derailment in Best Wishes feeling Ash's regained competence came at the cost of his personality and turned him into a Vanilla Protagonist. Supporters of Sun & Moon applauded the series for allowing Ash to act like a kid while furthering his development with Ash's Alola Leauge Victory marking his most progress since winning the Battle Frontier in Advance Generation. Detractors however see Ash in Sun & Moon as just as regressive as his Best Wishes incarnation, if not more so. This camp cites that like in Best Wishes Ash occasionally forgets type match-ups, and acts very irresponsible and immature (like trying to cheat on an Exam) with them arguing that Ash would never be one to settle down and attend school instead of travel. This camp goes further and claims that Ash didn't deserve to win the Alola League on account of there being no pre-requisites and Ash only won due to Hala overturning the verdict of Ash vs Hau, when every series prior portrayed the ref's call as non-negotiable."
Obviously, this entry could be condensed, but the main focus is on improving my spelling and grammar. Thanks in advance.
Edited by Mariofan99 on May 26th 2022 at 1:31:26 PM
@ Melinda
- He's Just Hiding:
- Despite Brian considering himself the last survivor of his plane crash, the way it happens at night makes it possible that he might have missed someone else in the water, like the mother and baby.
@ ElJuaco
Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022):
Peter Pan is depicted as having aged after appearing in Peter Pan and Flounder is depicted as looking the same as he did in The Little Mermaid when he was kidnapped by the Valley Gang. Shouldn't this create a few contradictions regardless their appearances in other media? Peter was depicted as still being a child in Return to Never Land, Western Animation/{{The Lion King 1½}} and Jake and the Never Land Pirates, (comma) and Flounder was depicted as an adult fish in The Little Mermaid II: Return to the Sea, in addition to his other appearances as a young fish in The Little Mermaid (1992) and The Little Mermaid: Ariel's Beginning. And don't forget the appearances of the two in House of Mouse. Then who played them in these productions?
@ mariofan99
- (remove quotation marks) Does Ash's characterization in this show count as Character Rerailment or Character Derailment? Those in the former camp feel that XY&Z overcorrected (superfluous word - cut) Ash's derailment in Best Wishes, (comma, superfluous words - cut) turning him into a Vanilla Protagonist. Supporters of Sun & Moon applauded the series for allowing Ash to act like a kid while furthering his development, (comma) with Ash's Alola League victory marking his highest placing since winning the Battle Frontier in Advance Generation. Detractors, (comma) however, (comma) see this Ash (superfluous words - cut) as just as regressive as his Best Wishes incarnation, if not more so, (comma, superfluous words - cut) citing that like in Best Wishes Ash occasionally forgets type match-ups, and acts very irresponsible and immature. (period, unnecessary detail - cut) They also argue that Ash would never be one to settle down and attend school instead of travel. This camp goes further and claims that (unnecessary detail - cut) Ash only won the Alola League due to Hala overturning the verdict on Ash vs Hau, when every previous series (superfluous word - cut)portrayed the ref's call as non-negotiable. (remove quotation marks)
Edited by Clare on May 26th 2022 at 9:07:18 AM
@ mariofan99
It's not a matter of "enough examples", it's a matter of getting your proposed edits through this topic without them needing to be corrected. You're nowhere near ready yet, but when you've posted a few edits without making mistakes, the Edit Banned thread
is the place to ask for your editing privileges to be restored. Keep in mind that the mods may ask you to continue to run your proposed edits through this topic if your writing still isn't quite up to scratch.
Also, this topic is for fixing people's writing mistakes. Anything else is off-topic.
Edited by Clare on May 26th 2022 at 9:27:31 AM
- Death Seeker: "Goodbye BfA" has Saurfang trying any different way he can to kill himself to get out of "Battle for Azeroth," only for Zekhan to keep stopping him at every turn. He tries running into an open field, but gets stopped. While chopping vegetables, he considers putting the knife to his throat, only to get a Dope Slap. He tries jumping off the lookout of Orgrimmar, only for a mattress to cushion his fall. It's only when he outright insults Sylvanas that she immediately kills him. As he falls to his death, he flips the double deuce to Zekhan before dying.
- Instantly Proven Wrong: "The Shadowlands Launch Experience" has the Jailer say "Nothing escapes the Maw," only to see several players just casually walking into the portal clearly marked "free exit lol."
- My God, You Are Serious!: "Struggles of a Barber" has the night elf druid first tell the Barber to give him a burn scar, then transforms into his whale form and tells him to skin him to turn him into a dolphin. The two of them laugh, with the barber thinking he's joking. Then the druid wants to be a woman, still wanting the previous changes as well while holding a pair of scissors.
"Snip, snip."
- Not What I Signed on For: "Struggles of a Barber" has the Barber's last words as the episode ends.
"I didn't sign up for this!"
- Oh, No... Not Again!: "The Shadowlands Launch Experience" has the Barber react with abject horror when the players follow him into the Maw.
"It's them! Please, not again!"
- The Roleplayer: "Struggles of Raid Bosses" and "The Shadowlands Launch Experience" feature a roleplayer who declares his sword to be the Demon Obliterator 5 Million. When he starts monologuing in Oribos like he's come back home, two First Ones wonder who he is.
First One 1: So, uh, you ever heard of this guy?
First One 2: Nope.
First One 1: Yeah I thought as much. - Screw This, I'm Outta Here!: "Struggles of a Barber" has the gnome barber telling his human replacement he's taking a long-overdue vacation as he's packing up and leaving town. It was one thing when he was just cutting hair, but then came facial reconstruction.
- Boring, but Practical: In "A Crap Guide to DPS," two samurai can't attack the dragon after it goes out of melee range. One samurai is standing around waiting to get back in range while the second is using their weaker ranged attack. JoCat states that it may be Scratch Damage at best, but it's better than no damage at all.
- Fun With Blenders: In "A Crap Guide to Healers," made before "Endwalker" went live, JoCat jokes that Sage nouliths are made by tossing carbuncles into a blender.
"Rest in peace, Carby."
- Video Game Cruelty Potential: In his "A Crap Guide to Healers" video, he shows this off by having his white mage "Rescue" another white mage into the pit of death in Suzaku's arena.
- Too Awesome to Use: Defied in "A Crap Guide to DPS." JoCat tells viewers that OGCDs (off-global cooldowns) should never be held for this reason, since they'll just come back quickly by the time you need them again.
"So use your goddamn free damage buttons. IT'S FREE DAMAGE!"
Hi, I'm RaisinsLasagna, I'm the new user who recently joined TV Tropes.
- In February 14, 2022, an YouTube channel named "The Video Archive" posted an video named "Quick-Fire Collections: Malaysia", which the video uploader has showcased a few of Malaysian VHS he bought and owned and also shown the inlay warning message for a while, but those were taken far away and texts weren't clear to read, and also parts of it were hidden by the fingers, but at least those inlay warning messages has finally discovered.
- CIC Video Malaysia also done the similar thing for their genuine VHS released too, but like the HVN one, it wasn't discovered for many years until The Video Archive showed it on an video, as already said above.
Edited by RaisinsLasagna on May 27th 2022 at 7:05:20 PM

Well, I think yesterday was the first day in 18 months where I didn't either post new tropes or edit old ones. If that ever happens for half a week in a row anytime in at least the next few months, then it probably means I'm dead or in the hospital.
@ Ex-Heroes Wham Line
- Book 2, Ex-Patriots, has a few.
- It turns out that the villain of the last book is Not Quite Dead when a crowd of ex-humans all speak to Danielle in unison with clear hatred.
"IF I'D KNOWN IT WAS YOU," said the chorus of Exes, "I'DVE RIPED YOUR HEAD OFF YESTERDAY!"
- Agent Smith's mind-control powers are revealed when Stealth if about to give him a well-deserved No-Holds-Barred Beatdown and he suddenly asks if she wants to hurt him.
The first froze inches from his head. It trembled for a moment as she tried to force it through the air.
- When the Cerberus armor goes out of control and Lieutenant Gibbs hears a strange voice, it turns out that a character with seemingly insignificant powers stowed away on the mission and is poised for a Big Damn Heroes moment.
The Driver: I'm called the Driver, and this, esse is the coolest carjacking ever.
- A series of wham lines that slowly reveal how Smith brainwashed everyone into thinking that there are thousands of soldiers and refugees at the base rather than just a handful of people he kept alive for his own uses begins with this exchange between Captain Freedom and Stealth.
Captain Freedom: You haven't seen everyone.
Stealth: I believe I have.
@ Justified Genius Bonus- In the season 6 premier, Ava tells Raylan that she was in a seventh-grad production of Brigadoon, which is a play about a love triangle in a rural community that is out-of-touch with modern times, not unlike Harlan County. Brigadoon also has a major character who is trying to get out of town but is forced to stay due to the needs and actions of other people, not unlike Raylan and Ava throughout season 6.
@ TaleSpin- Unintentionally Sympathetic: Colonel Grogg from "War of the Weirds" is a stern, paranoid, Trigger-Happy soldier, who apparently got promoted due to Nepotism. Still, it's debatable whether he deserves to be subjected to Gaslighting and a Humiliation Conga just for wanting to defend Earth against what looked like a real alien invasion and being prepared to arrest anyone who is guilty of the serious crime of perpetrating a hoax against the military (although Baloo didn't set out to do that in the first place).
@ Men of Sherwood- Dick Tracy: The city's many unnamed uniformed cops are alert, well-armed professionals. Some of them get ambushed and killed when they're alone a few times, but in force, they're capable of conducting daring raids and help gun down several well-armed elite hitmen in the climax without any trouble.
@ The Day of the Triffids- Adaptational Heroism: In the book, Coker kidnaps people to make them help refugees blinded by a meteor shower and Durrant is a religious fanatic who deliberately sends the protagonist on the wrong trail after his girlfriend. In the film, they're helping blind refugees in a purely selfless and peaceful way, without kidnapping or misleading anyone.
- Bolivian Army Ending: The escaped convicts/rapists and their victims are last seen shooting at the triffids or running from them as a swarm advances.
- The Remnant: The crews of several navy submarines avoid being blinded because they are submerged when everyone else loses their sight and broadcast radio messages to alert survivors that they're willing to ferry people to safety.
- Sole Surviving Scientist: Marine biologist Dr. Goodwin is the only known scientist who isn't blinded by the meteorites and vulnerable to the attacking triffids. He immediately starts trying to find their weaknesses to give humanity a fighting chance, and eventually succeeds.
- Stiff Upper Lip: The airplane crew members are calm and professional despite their fear and grief as they run low on fuel (and notice this by feeling around where the needle is) without knowing where they can land.
- Unexplained Recovery: Coker and the Durrant sisters were under sedation due to being injured in a car accident when the meteorites blinded most of the world, but when Bill and Susan meet the trio (and their wards), they're moving around fine without any sign of any accident injuries.
@ Blinded by the LightEdited by Melinda on May 25th 2022 at 6:08:18 AM