Goldilocks and the Three Bears - meaning and definition. What is Goldilocks and the Three Bears
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What (who) is Goldilocks and the Three Bears - definition


Goldilocks and the Three Bears         
  • London based writer and publisher [[Joseph Cundall]] changed the antagonist from an old woman to a girl
  • "Scrapefoot" illustration by [[John D. Batten]] in ''More English Fairy Tales'' (1895)
  • Robert Southey
  • Goldilocks caught in Baby Bear's bed – by [[Leonard Leslie Brooke]]
  • Illustration in "The Story of the Three Bears" second edition, 1839, published by W. N. Wright of 60 [[Pall Mall, London]]
  • Illustration by John Batten, 1890
FAIRY TALE
Three Bears; Goldylocks and the Three Bears; Mama Bear; Goldie-locks; Goldilocks; Scrapefoot; Three bears; The Three Bears; Goldy locks and three bears; Story of the Three Bears; Goldilocks (character); Goldilocks (person); The Story of the Three Bears; The 3 Bears
"Goldilocks and the Three Bears" (originally titled "The Story of the Three Bears") is a 19th-century British fairy tale of which three versions exist. The original version of the tale tells of an obscene old woman who enters the forest home of three bachelor bears while they are away.
Goldilocks         
  • London based writer and publisher [[Joseph Cundall]] changed the antagonist from an old woman to a girl
  • "Scrapefoot" illustration by [[John D. Batten]] in ''More English Fairy Tales'' (1895)
  • Robert Southey
  • Goldilocks caught in Baby Bear's bed – by [[Leonard Leslie Brooke]]
  • Illustration in "The Story of the Three Bears" second edition, 1839, published by W. N. Wright of 60 [[Pall Mall, London]]
  • Illustration by John Batten, 1890
FAIRY TALE
Three Bears; Goldylocks and the Three Bears; Mama Bear; Goldie-locks; Goldilocks; Scrapefoot; Three bears; The Three Bears; Goldy locks and three bears; Story of the Three Bears; Goldilocks (character); Goldilocks (person); The Story of the Three Bears; The 3 Bears
·noun ·same·as Goldylocks.
goldilocks         
  • London based writer and publisher [[Joseph Cundall]] changed the antagonist from an old woman to a girl
  • "Scrapefoot" illustration by [[John D. Batten]] in ''More English Fairy Tales'' (1895)
  • Robert Southey
  • Goldilocks caught in Baby Bear's bed – by [[Leonard Leslie Brooke]]
  • Illustration in "The Story of the Three Bears" second edition, 1839, published by W. N. Wright of 60 [[Pall Mall, London]]
  • Illustration by John Batten, 1890
FAIRY TALE
Three Bears; Goldylocks and the Three Bears; Mama Bear; Goldie-locks; Goldilocks; Scrapefoot; Three bears; The Three Bears; Goldy locks and three bears; Story of the Three Bears; Goldilocks (character); Goldilocks (person); The Story of the Three Bears; The 3 Bears
¦ noun
1. informal a person with golden hair.
2. a woodland buttercup. [Ranunculus auricomus.]
3. a yellow-flowered plant resembling the Michaelmas daisy. [Aster linosyris.]
Examples of use of Goldilocks and the Three Bears
1. Later she uses large drawings to tell the story of Goldilocks and the Three Bears.
2. The Tiger Who Came to Tea, Judith Kerr 2'. Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Jan Brett 30.
3. It was a real–life version of Goldilocks and the Three Bears –– only in reverse –– when a woman came home to find a young bear eating oatmeal in her kitchen.
4. "Like Goldilocks and the three bears, ocean animals don‘t like it too hot or too cold, they like it just right." To do the study, Worm and Myers –– along with Marcel Sandow, Heike K.