baby boy grow up

Braxton 2022-12-21 04:27:53

When one day he suddenly comes to talk to you about how to carry a schoolbag is cooler, and tell you how to dress and match. The little boy has grown up. But he's really sad, the more he cares about his image, the better. On the contrary, his best friend, Fatty, has become a big hit in the school because of a cartoon that only a child would like.
The little fat man is too shy, he actually rides that pink bicycle with lace. But this movie is to tell you that even if you are a wee child, as long as you are yourself, you can become a character that everyone likes. There is also a need to talk about hygiene, just like the baby who likes to play with his nose, no one wants to pay attention to him even if he is very simple. Although the elder brother of the little skin boy always bullied him, he didn't feel so bad. Although the elder brother tortured his younger brother by various means, I think the most powerful thing was the one who sniffed my armpit. The most imaginative is to put the shoes on the door of the brother's room and tell the little kid that he will kill him when he comes out. The little boy was holding back his urine. Hey.
The movie should be about a story of a little boy and a little fat brother reconciling. The real friendship is to dare to be honest instead of despising each other. But I think that the little fat man is really too much sometimes, the big fat clothes, the pink bicycle. Burrows! Give him a hole in the ground. . .

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Extended Reading

Diary of a Wimpy Kid quotes

  • Greg Heffley: [smugly] You're way too smart for me Patty Ferrell...

  • Greg Heffley: We'll hide here for the rest of class because I'm not playing that game! It's not fair. He's got all the neanderthals on the same team. It's barbaric!

    Angie Steadman: It's completely barbaric. This place is an intellectual wasteland. But it's nice to meet a person more interested in his mind than his body.

    Rowley Jefferson: You girls get to jump rope. What are you doing hiding?

    Angie Steadman: Avoiding the pain. It all starts in middle school, you know? You're not a kid anymore. The coddling has stopped. Kids are now separated by intelligence. The weak are picked on and girls that you've known since kindergarten won't even talk to you anymore.

    Greg Heffley: Well, it sounds like you've got it all figured out so go back to your book.

    [laughs]

    Angie Steadman: This place is a glorified holding pen. It's where adults put you as you make that awkward transition between child and teenager so they don't even have to look at you.

    [pauses]

    Angie Steadman: Hi. I'm Angie.

    Greg Heffley: [Pulls Rowley's hand away] Great Story! We're going to go now.

    Rowley Jefferson: Why? This is a good spot.

    Angie Steadman: It's a perfect spot. I survived all of the sixth grade here and I would enjoy some like-minded company to get me through the seventh.

    Greg Heffley: Is that the whistle? I think I hear the whistle.

    [laughs]

    Greg Heffley: We need to go!