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Some Related Sentences

Fictional and examples
Fictional examples include:
Fictional examples are featured in the books Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, Debt of Honor, Ted Bell's Pirate, and The Eleventh Commandment ; in the movies Mission: Impossible, Spy Game, The Bourne Identity, Safe House, and The Recruit ; and the TV shows Burn Notice, Spooks, and Covert Affairs.
Fictional examples of aptronyms include Mr. Talkative and Mr. Worldly Wiseman in John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress ( 1678 ), Truman Burbank ( true-man ), the lead character in the 1998 film The Truman Show, the principal cast of the Mr. Men ( 1971 ), and all the characters in Marc Blitzstein's 1937 play The Cradle Will Rock.
* Fictional examples of language use that are simpler than our own everyday language.

Fictional and can
Category: Fictional characters who can turn intangible
Category: Fictional characters who can stretch themselves
Category: Fictional characters who can duplicate themselves
Category: Fictional characters who can turn intangible
Category: Fictional characters who can teleport
Category: Fictional characters who can change size ‎
Category: Fictional characters who can duplicate themselves ‎
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can turn invisible
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can turn invisible
Category: Fictional characters who can teleport
Category: Fictional characters who can turn invisible
Category: Fictional characters who can teleport
Fictional countries can also be used in stories set in a distant future, with other political borders than today.
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can turn intangible
Category: Fictional characters who can duplicate themselves
Category: Fictional characters who can teleport
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can move at superhuman speeds
Category: Fictional characters who can stretch themselves

Fictional and be
Fictional currencies may also bear the name coin ( as such, an item may be said to be worth 123 coin or 123 coins ).
Fictional languages are intended to be the languages of a fictional world and are often designed with the intent of giving more depth and an appearance of plausibility to the fictional worlds with which they are associated, and to have their characters communicate in a fashion which is both alien and dislocated.
* Fictional planets of the Solar System: Planets said to be located within the Solar System that, in reality, may not exist, do not exist, or have never existed.
Fictional character Lucy Ricardo, the lead character in I Love Lucy, was said to be from West Jamestown.
Fictional languages are intended to be the languages of a fictional world, and are often designed with the intent of giving more depth and an appearance of plausibility to the fictional worlds with which they are associated, and to have their characters communicate in a fashion which is both alien and dislocated.
Androids, such as Data of Star Trek: The Next Generation, are considered " robots "; however, articles about fictional androids should instead be sub-categorized into: Category: Fictional androids.
Cyborgs, such as the T-800 from the Terminator series, are not considered robots and should be included in: Category: Fictional cyborgs instead.
For instance, the definition would seem to allow humans with a prosthesis to be considered " cyborgs " but this seems inappropriate ( see: Category: Fictional amputees ).
Robots and androids are considered distinct from cyborgs and should be classified into: Category: Fictional robots or: Category: Fictional androids, respectively.
Fictional books should not be confused with books that are works of fiction, such as novels and short stories, that actually exist, but are works of imagination, not fact.
Their computer counterparts, role-playing video games, sometimes have elaborate fictional universes that continue to be explored over many sequels, such as the best selling Final Fantasy X which along with its sequel Final Fantasy X-2 sold 10 million copies and boasts a legion of enthusiasts of its Fictional Universe.
Not to be confused with: Category: Fictional characters with dwarfism, which concerns human beings with a medical condition that makes them shorter than average.
It also appears in the later, and short lived, Crusade television series, the TV movies A Call to Arms and In the Beginning as well as the The Lost Tales ( the first in an anthology series which were to be released on DVD, now aborted due to funding issues ) plus a number of written short stories and novels based in the same Fictional universe.
Fictional " hardest materials " such as adamantium and scrith should be categorized in: Category: Fictional materials, not here.
Fictional information brokers can be of varying importance and have varying methods.
* Fictional columnist Smoove B from The Onion refers to himself in the third person and sometimes turns his name into a verb to inform women that they will be " Smooved.

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