Citations:Bulbasaur
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English citations of Bulbasaur
- 1999 November 28, Rob <khyron_kravshera@my-deja.com>, “7 vs 1 Comp NO RUSH!”, in alt.games.starcraft[1] (Usenet), message-ID <81s186$63m$1@nnrp1.deja.com>:
- If some lamer really wants to live, make him say stuff like "Bulbasaur is my daddy!"
- 2000 June 20, The Childers <childers2@erols.com>, “You Know You're in an Alternate Timeline When...”, in soc.history.what-if[2] (Usenet), message-ID <8imvem$4or$1@bob.news.rcn.net>:
- And teachers get angry because the Histomon cards distract kids from studying their textbooks about how Pikachu crossed the Alps and Bulbasaur led the Chinese Revolution.
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- Now I know what you're thinking: What country has ever been environmentalist? I assure you that this is not a round of applause to a green country, but rather a quick summary of world politics up to this point. The reason [Celadon City] has a grass gym is to correspond with Bulbasaur, who, as we said, represent the Earth.
- 2011 May 3, Ken Denmead, The Geek Dad's Guide to Weekend Fun: Cool Hacks, Cutting-Edge Games, and More Awesome Projects for the Whole Family[4], Penguin, →ISBN:
- It'll be an awesome way for your kids to make the connection between the creatures in the shows they watch and the real animals if they can walk through the zoo, marking down on their cards. “Ooh, there's a bat just like Zubat! There's a frog just like Bulbasaur! BINGO!”
- 2014 July 20, James Dwyer, Brendan Dwyer, Cult Fiction[5], Paused Books:
- There was only a small few minutes of tedious chat before he let me have my pick of three Pokémon: Bulbasaur, Squirtle or Charmander. 'Pick a Bulbasaur, they're the easiest for the start,' Randy said, patronisingly.
- 2018 October 30, Mick Herron, The Marylebone Drop: A Novella[6], Soho Press, →ISBN, page 26:
- Still, though, she ought to be made to realise just what a prize she'd cost him, all for the sake of a quick grope. “A bulbasaur You know how rare that is?” It was plain she didn't. “The fuck,” she asked, “are you talking about?
- 2019 October 22, Erika Owen, The Art of Flaneuring: How to Wander with Intention and Discover a Better Life[7], Simon and Schuster, →ISBN, page 168:
- I don't know about you, but I spent a little bit of time being annoyed that Android users got the app first . . . and that was forgotten quicker than a Bulbasaur passing through Cerulean City once it became available for iPhone users.