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Quiz about Arthur Season Three
Quiz about Arthur Season Three

"Arthur" Season Three Trivia Quiz


Some of my favorite "Arthur" episodes were in season three. How well do you know them?

A multiple-choice quiz by DrLoveGun. Estimated time: 3 mins.
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Author
DrLoveGun
Time
3 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
422,692
Updated
Jan 17 26
# Qns
15
Difficulty
New Game
Avg Score
14 / 15
Plays
6
Last 3 plays: mazza47 (15/15), GoodwinPD (15/15), xchasbox (10/15).
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Question 1 of 15
1. In "Buster's Back", what is Arthur afraid of? Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. In "The Ballad of Buster Baxter", Art Garfunkel sings a song about Buster. In this universe, what kind of animal is Art Garfunkel? Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. "Arthur Goes Crosswire" and "Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus" take place during the same week.


Question 4 of 15
4. In "The Chips Are Down", D.W. eats a green potato chip and then she's tricked into thinking she is going to die soon. In "Revenge of the Chip", who convinces Bitzi to publish this story in the newspaper? Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. In "Binky Rules", which two kids work together as detectives to prove Binky's innocence? Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. In "Meet Binky", we find out that the Binky band is a group of what? Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. In "Arthur Rides the Bandwagon", all the kids get a toy called what? Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. In "Dad's Dessert Dilemma", who becomes the most popular person in Elwood City? Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. In "Popular Girls", which two girls follow advice from a magazine for teenagers? Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. In "The Return of the King", who pulls the sword out of the stone? Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. In "What Scared Sue Ellen?", what scared Sue Ellen? Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. "Arthur's Dummy Disaster" properly introduces who? Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. "Francine and the Feline" introduces who? Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. What happens to the Tibble twins in "Double Tibble Trouble?" Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. This is about "Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival".

Fill in the blank: "Having fun isn't hard / When you've got a _____."

Answer: (Two words (the two lines rhyme))

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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In "Buster's Back", what is Arthur afraid of?

Answer: Buster might change

Arthur is initially thrilled when Buster's mom calls and tells him that Buster will come home that day. D.W. and some of Arthur's friends tell him that Buster might have changed during his travels. D.W. tells Arthur that Buster might have changed so much that he does not want to be Arthur's friend anymore. Arthur believes that might be true. Arthur takes out as many books from the library as he can to learn about different parts of the country and different parts of the world so he can be prepared for whatever Buster throws at him. Buster comes back with souvenirs and he still seems to love Mr. Read's cakes and he still loves checkers.

He does not seem to have changed very much and he is confused about why Arthur is telling him all these facts about all these places.
2. In "The Ballad of Buster Baxter", Art Garfunkel sings a song about Buster. In this universe, what kind of animal is Art Garfunkel?

Answer: Moose

A singing moose appears throughout the episode with his guitar, singing and playing a song about Buster. We don't know who he is until after the episode ends and before most of the closing credits. The first closing credit we see in this episode mentions him by name.

During the episode, Buster sees that a lot of things changed while he was away. First of all, Brain is now Arthur's writing partner for the book that Arthur and Buster had been writing (an adventure book similar to "Robin Hood") and Brain has changed a lot of the book, making it more realistic and less fantasy. Secondly, Arthur goes with his friends to see a movie that he used to hate (Francine changed his mind) and now all of Buster's friends love the movie and Buster hates it. Thirdly, the other kids learned to square dance while Buster was away, and in this episode he leaves the class because he's afraid of knocking more people over than he already has. Another thing: he finds a key on the ground and shows it to Arthur, but Arthur explains that it belongs to Mr. Morris. Another thing: in the store, Buster finds bags that have his friends' faces on them (the cookies that they made together in "How The Cookie Crumbles"). All of this makes Buster feel left out.

The rest of the kids have a meeting at Muffy's house. Muffy decides that Buster has turned into a snob, and they do not want to be his friend anymore. The next day, they do not let him sit with him at the lunch table. This makes Buster feel sad. The kids then feel bad for him, so they throw a party at Arthur's house just for Buster, so that he can show his slide show and they can learn more about his adventures. Buster does not come to the party, Eventually, the kids realize that no one invited him, so they all go to this house and invite him together. In the end, they all see that Buster hasn't really changed and they all reconcile and he's their friend again.

At the end of the episode, Buster asks Arthur how long the singing moose was there. Arthur is shocked by the question because he thought the moose came with Buster. The episode ends with Arthur saying "Mom, there's a singing moose in front of the house." After the show is over but right before the regular closing credits, a special credit appears on the screen, revealing that Art Garfunkel is the voice of the moose.

The moose appears all throughout the episode, but rarely gets acknowledged by the kids. He shows up at Muffy's house at the meeting there. No one says anything about him. He's in Arthur's bedroom when they're playing checkers, but no one seems to notice him. He's only acknowledged twice. The first time he is acknowledged is at Buster's house, when he plays upbeat music and calls Buster a "sad sad Bunny." Buster calls him out and tells him that's not sad music. The moose stops for a few seconds, and then he changes the music so it sounds more sad. The only other time he is acknowledged is at the end of the episode, when Arthur and Buster talk about him and then Arthur calls his mother to tell her about him. I always found it strange that for most of the episode, it seemed the moose was only visible to the audience and it turned out that the kids in Elwood City could see him this whole time but they waited until the end of the episode to do anything about him.
3. "Arthur Goes Crosswire" and "Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus" take place during the same week.

Answer: True

Most "Arthur" episodes are two 10-minute stories in one episode, separated with a "And Now a Word From Us Kids" segment in between. Usually, the stories are unrelated. In season three, several of them are related. One example is the third episode of the season, which is "Arthur Goes Crosswire/Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus."

Mr. Ratburn assigns a report and the kids have to work in pairs that he assigns. He pairs Arthur and Muffy together, Sue Ellen and Brain together, and Francine and Buster together. "Arthur Goes Crosswire/Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus" is entirely about this report. The scene where Mr. Ratburn introduces the report is shown in both segments and it is clearly the same scene. "Arthur Goes Crosswire" cuts it off earlier than "Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus." The latter episode confirms that Arthur and Muffy were indeed paired together for this report, confirming that both segments are about the same report. The two segments merely focus on different pairings.

The first half of the episode is about Arthur and Muffy. When they're paired up, Muffy invites Arthur on her yacht with her. Afterwards at the Sugar Bowl, Arthur starts to tell Buster that it was boring on the yacht. Some of the other girls ask Arthur questions about the yacht. They are jealous that he got to be on it and they didn't. When Arthur realizes that he is making people jealous, he gradually starts changing and behaving more like Muffy. He stops playing sports because he does not want to get dirty. He shames his friends who do not have satellite TV. He starts a club only for people who met Wilbur Rabbit (he met him at sea). He will not pick up anything that has been on the ground. He says "Vomitrocious." Brain discovers that Arthur is behaving like Muffy. He convinces all the other kids to behave like Muffy to see how Arthur likes it. At their next baseball game, they do just that. Muffy thinks they all want to be her and she's proud of that, but Arthur is horrified to realize he is turning into Muffy. Arthur jumps into a puddle of water to prove that he is still Arthur. His friends reconcile with him. We do not see Arthur and Muffy's report until "Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus." Arthur dresses up as a whale while Muffy does the speaking.

The second half of the episode is about Sue Ellen and Brain. They agree to build a model dinosaur. Sue Ellen is initially excited at the thought of doing a report with the smartest kid in class. She soon learns that Brain wants to do the entire report by himself and he does not want her help. We see that Brain has nightmares that if he allows Sue Ellen to help him, her part of the report will be terrible and they'll fail and he'll have to repeat third grade. Sue Ellen is angry that Brain refuses her help when Mr. Ratburn told them to work together. Brain finishes the dinosaur by himself. Sue Ellen made a dinosaur head, but Brain rejects it. On the day of the report, Brain has the finished dinosaur in his hands, but Sue Ellen steps in front of him to confront him about not letting her help. They get in a fight and he ends up falling in the mud and dropping the dinosaur in the mud, breaking it. Francine tells Brain that he deserved to fall in the mud and she explains how he was making Sue Ellen feel when he kept rejecting her ideas. Brain realizes that Francine is right and he apologizes to Sue Ellen. Though the model dinosaur is wrecked, Sue Ellen tells Brain that their report will turn out just fine if he trusts her. He learns his lesson and he trusts her. Sue Ellen convinces Mr. Ratburn to let the class outside, where their report is set up. She shows the class the dinosaur bones in the mud and says that she and Brain recreated what archaeologists discovered when they found dinosaur bones. Initially, the class praises Brain for the idea, but he tells them it was Sue Ellen's idea. Sue Ellen then says that there is a proper way to dig up bones and that Brain will show them how. Brain does just that.

There is no segment about Buster and Francine's report. The fact that they are supposed to work together on the report is mentioned a few times in "Sue Ellen and the Brainosaurus," but we never see their report. We see that Buster is trying to avoid Francine at all costs by hiding and wearing disguises in the library. It turns out that their report is not ready on the day that it is due because Buster did not do any work and Francine refused to do it all by herself. The episode ends with Francine handcuffing her arm and Buster's arm together (where she got the handcuffs is never revealed) and saying that they will stick together until their report is done.
4. In "The Chips Are Down", D.W. eats a green potato chip and then she's tricked into thinking she is going to die soon. In "Revenge of the Chip", who convinces Bitzi to publish this story in the newspaper?

Answer: Mrs. Read

In "The Chips Are Down", Arthur and Buster search through a bag of potato chips for interesting-looking ones. D.W. wants a potato chip, but they say "no." When they are out of the kitchen, she steals a green one and eats it. This makes Arthur and Buster angry. To get revenge on her, they loudly say to each other that green potato chips are poisonous. They know that D.W. is eavesdropping and they know that this will fool her into thinking she is going to die. Their plan works, albeit the consequences aren't quite what they expected. D.W. asks the Tibbles about green potato chips at school, and they tell her that those chips are poisonous. Binky overhears the conversation and tells D.W. that he recently ate a green one. They both think that they are going to die, so they spend the next few days together trying to live out as many of their dreams as they can, thinking they don't have long to live. Near the end of the episode, Arthur tells D.W. that green potato chips are not poisonous and that he and Buster were just pranking her. Binky does ballet, an activity that he'd wanted to do but had been too embarrassed to do. D.W. sneaks onstage and tells Binky the truth about green chips. At first, Binky quits ballet, but he resumes when his friends tell him he was the best part of the ballet.

"Revenge of the Chip" is a sequel to "The Chips are Down", making this one of the few episodes where both segments are related. In this episode, we learn that the whole town knows that D.W. ate a green potato chip and thought she was going to die. Everywhere she goes, older kids and even adults are mocking her for this. At first, D.W. thinks that Arthur told everyone, and refuses to listen to him no matter how much he denies it. Arthur finds an article in the newspaper about the subject and then spends much of the episode trying to steal everyone's newspaper. It does not work because everyone calls for a re-delivery. Near the end of the episode, Arthur and D.W. hear their mom talking on the phone. Their mom reveals that she told Bitzi (Buster's mother and the owner of the Elwood City newspaper) to publish the D.W./green chip story in the newspaper because she thought it was hilarious. D.W. runs in screaming and calling her out. Her mother apologizes, saying she did not know D.W. was embarrassed. Mrs. Read promises never to repeat the story. At the end of the episode, the family attends a recording of a local TV show called "You Do the Most Embarrassing Things." At first, the show is introduced as being about a kid who ate a green potato chip and thought it was poisonous. This horrifies D.W. until she sees it was about Binky. He does not mind repeating the story and he even has dancers act out a ballet re-enacting the incident.
5. In "Binky Rules", which two kids work together as detectives to prove Binky's innocence?

Answer: Fern and Buster

Mr. Morris finds paint on the school walls that says "Binky Rules." He accuses Binky of putting it there and makes him scrub it off after school. Binky gets his friends to help and tells them that he is innocent. The girls ask Fern for help (because she proved to be a savant detective in "Fern's Slumber Party") while the boys ask Buster for help (because he proved Arthur's innocence in "Arthur Accused"). The boys and girls get in a feud over which one of them is the better detective, but Binky asks them to work together. Fern and Buster agree to this, but they seem to end up feuding more than helping each other.

In general, Fern is doing good detective work while Buster is sabotaging her every move. However, Buster solves it when he sees a van with "Binky Rules" painted on it. It turns out there is a new band named "Binky" and they were told to spray paint "Binky Rules" all over town to spread the word about their existence, not knowing that there was a kid named Binky who'd get blamed for it. Buster and Fern explain the situation to the band's manager, who then arrive at the school just as Binky is about to get expelled and they explain the situation to the adults at the school. The band cleans up the spray paint and Binky is off the hook. Binky gets two copies of the CD and extra free tickets to their next concert in town as an apology for accidentally getting him in trouble.
6. In "Meet Binky", we find out that the Binky band is a group of what?

Answer: Holograms

The band "Binky" is set to perform a concert in Elwood City. Their manager says on the radio that he will have a special announcement at the show. There is a long line for tickets. On the day that tickets go on sale, the Read family buys shoes for D.W. first and she takes a long time deciding which shoes she wants, so the Reads get there pretty late. They get tickets but their seats are terrible.

Later in the episode, Mr. Read tells Arthur that he got a job feeding the band before the show. Arthur is invited backstage to become the first kid to meet the Binky band. Mr. Read also tells Arthur that he can invite his friends backstage. Eventually, Arthur agrees to do so. The kids quickly learn that the Binky band are holograms. The music is created by a synthesizer. They go back to the audience feeling disappointed.

The Binky song is actually "Matalii ja mustii" by a Finnish band called Varttina. They are credited at the end of "Binky Rules" and again at the end of "Meet Binky". The lyrics are in Finnish, but the English translations might shock you. These lyrics are not appropriate for a kids' show if you ask me. I theorize that the creators of the show decided that did not matter because the show's audience was mostly American kids who do not know Finnish and would not understand the lyrics.
7. In "Arthur Rides the Bandwagon", all the kids get a toy called what?

Answer: Woogle

In this universe, there's a toy called "Woogle". They are similar to Furbys, which were popular toys in the real world in the 1990s when this first aired. For most of the episode, all the kids in school have one except Arthur. Arthur insults them in front of the kids who have them, but he wants one so he does not feel left out. In the end, Arthur inadvertently starts a new fad when he starts playing with his juice cap. This makes all the kids drop their Woogles and start playing with juice caps. At the end of the episode, Grandma Thora buys a Woogle for Arthur as a reward for his good report card, but the Woogle fad has ended and he no longer wants it.

"Poogle" is the toy that Arthur inadvertently buys when he thinks he is buying a Woogle. He ends up giving it to a random baby in a stroller that passes by.
8. In "Dad's Dessert Dilemma", who becomes the most popular person in Elwood City?

Answer: Mr. Read

Mr. Ratburn announces that the next day will be Galileo's birthday. Binky suggests that they throw a party for that day and a few other kids suggest bringing desserts. Mr. Ratburn agrees. Arthur initially wants his mother to bake cookies, but she is too busy. His father gets thrilled about the idea of baking a dessert for the class because he is a professional chef. Arthur does not like the idea because he sometimes does not like his father's experiments in cooking. Arthur's father makes a cake shaped like the Leaning Tower of Pisa because it's in Italy, where Arthur is from. Arthur insults the cake, but when his mother gives him a scolding look, he thanks his father. He brings the cake to school, but he tries to hide it to avoid getting teased by his classmates and by Mr. Ratburn.

Mr. Ratburn finds the cake and takes a bite. He absolutely loves it. Arthur tells him that his father made it. All the kids in the class want Mr. Read's cake. Mr. Ratburn gives some of the cake to Ms. Sweetwater. Ms. Sweetwater wants more cake for the next day. Arthur tells his father that his cake was the most popular dessert in the class and that Ms. Sweetwater wants a cake too. D.W. also wants a cake for her school. Mr. Read is proud to learn that he is suddenly extremely popular.

The cake for Ms. Sweetwater is also very popular. She says that it came from Arthur (but she doesn't say that his father made it). Through the windows, Ms. Sweetwater's kids wave to Arthur and smile at him. Arthur sees that and he bows to them, which confuses Francine because she was not looking out the windows.

As the episode progresses, Arthur asks for more and more desserts from Mr. Read, who is already getting a lot of orders from other people. Mr. Read does his best to fulfill Arthur's demands as well as everybody else's demands, but he begins to feel overworked. Mrs. Read tells Arthur not to ask for any more desserts because he is overworking his father. Arthur agrees not to ask for any more desserts for a while. He waits an hour and a half, then goes to his father trying to demand a LOT of desserts. He then sees trouble.

Mr. Crosswire is at the house for a dessert that he ordered, but the dessert is not ready because Mr. Read got behind schedule because he'd been making so many other desserts. Mr. Crosswire gives Mr. Read two more hours to finish the dessert he ordered, or Mr. Crosswire threatens never to buy any more desserts from Mr. Read. Arthur feels extremely guilty and throws away his paper of requests. He apologizes to his father. His father says that he likes making these desserts for Arthur and his schoolmates, but he tells Arthur to ask him if he can make desserts instead of just telling him to make desserts. Arthur makes it up to his father by helping him finish the dessert for Mr. Crosswire. As he's helping with the cooking, Arthur says that he had no idea how much work it is to cook. They not only finish the dessert for Mr. Crosswire, they even have time to make a second cake for themselves. Mr. Crosswire is pleased with his cake and so are they.
9. In "Popular Girls", which two girls follow advice from a magazine for teenagers?

Answer: Fern and Sue Ellen

One day, Francine accidentally brings Catherine's backpack to school. Inside, there is a magazine called "Popular Girls". The magazine has a quiz to test how likeable you are, but the questions are very weird. Francine throws the magazine in the trash. Fern and Sue Ellen find the magazine and take the quiz. Fern scores low, and the magazine says that she is too quiet and no one can notice her. Sue Ellen scores too high, and the magazine says that she is great at everything and everyone is jealous of her. Fern knew that she had a reputation for being quiet and Sue Ellen knew she had a reputation for being great at everything, and now they think they've learned they will lose their friends because of these things. They take the magazine's advice and start acting differently. Their friends do not like their changes in behavior.

Eventually, their friends discover that they were acting according to the magazine. Francine says that the magazine is idiotic and that she and the other kids always loved Fern and Sue Ellen for who they were. Fern goes back to being a quiet girl who is an expect in poetry and detective work. Sue Ellen flips Binky to let everyone know that she's back to being herself. The girls give the magazine to Mr. Ratburn. Mr. Ratburn scores even higher than Sue Ellen on the quiz, and the magazine says that he does not give enough homework.
10. In "The Return of the King", who pulls the sword out of the stone?

Answer: Arthur

Mr. Ratburn's class goes to a Medieval fair. They end up competing against Mr. Pryce-Jones' class. Mr. Pryce-Jones was Mr. Ratburn's 3rd grade teacher and Mr. Pryce-Jones is much more strict than Mr. Ratburn. Mr. Pryce-Jones' kids look a lot like Mr. Ratburn's kids. Mr. Pryce-Jones' kids win all of the contests except for one.

There's a sword trapped in a stone and throughout the episode, we see people trying to pull it out. Arthur discovers that the top part of the handle of the sword is a lock.

He twists it, and then he can easily pull out the sword. He is named the king of the fair, with Mr. Pryce-Jones and his students being astonished that Arthur outsmarted them all.
11. In "What Scared Sue Ellen?", what scared Sue Ellen?

Answer: Perky

Sue Ellen is the toughest kid in school. Even Binky cannot scare her. One day, she walks through the woods and hears a scary noise. This traumatizes her for a few days. The next day, Binky notices that Sue Ellen seems unusually edgy. He convinces Arthur and Buster that Sue Ellen is scared of something. They end up going into the woods to find out what the noise was. They all hear it. They decide to all run home.

Sue Ellen's parents watch a slide show of their trip to the Swiss Alps, the first mountain they ever climbed. Sue Ellen's father mentioned that they were terrified. When Sue Ellen asks how they got over their fear, he replies that they prepared and got the right equipment so they could face their fear head on. She then calls the boys, tells them that she is going back to the woods, and she tells them what her father told her. They all return wearing different types of protective equipment. They find that the source of the noise: Perky. Ms. Wood, Perky's owner and Pal's mother, who was introduced in "Arthur's Pet Business", was trapped under the roots of a tree and had been howling for help. An arborist cuts one of the roots and Perky is reunited with Ms. Wood. She is thrilled to have Perky back and she offers the kids a kiss, but then they all run. The episode ends with Sue Ellen telling this story to Brain and Francine, except that she fictionalizes the ending by saying it was a two-headed wolf man.
12. "Arthur's Dummy Disaster" properly introduces who?

Answer: George

George had appeared in a few previous episodes. He spoke in "Arthur's Lost Library Book" back in season one, when Binky asked him, "Where is it?" George asked, "What?" because Binky did not ask what he was looking for. However, his name had never been revealed and we had never learned much about him. In "Arthur's Dummy Disaster", we learn that the moose's name is George.

The episode begins in arts and crafts class. Most of the kids made things that do not work well. George shows the kids a dummy and claims that he made it. He then admits that his father is the one who made it. (In "Fifteen", we learn that George's father actually gave it to George as a Christmas present.) George then tells the kids that the dummy's name is Wally. George then uses Wally to tell jokes. George's voice for Wally is a little bit higher-pitched than his regular voice. The kids love his jokes.

When George walks away, the other kids start talking to each other about him. They're trying to find out why they haven't been hanging out with him. Muffy tells the kids a story about a time that George gave her his juice box when they were in kindergarten because she had accidentally spilled hers, although this story cannot be true because she moved to Elwood City when they were in second grade. Francine remembers hugging him when he was the goalie and a soccer ball bounced off his antler and went all the way to the other side of the field into the other goal for the championship-winning goal. Buster thinks he's quiet because he's an alien.

The next day, George tells some more jokes with Wally and amuses the kids even more. He also wins a baseball game by using Wally's mouth to catch a fly ball for the final out (I find it strange that he was allowed to use Wally while playing baseball, but it's a cartoon). The other kids ask George how to be ventriloquists. They all end up getting their own dummies and they spend the next day doing ventriloquism.

The next day, the other kids have problems with their dummies, but they admit that they were getting tired of them anyway. George continues using Wally, although Wally looks dirty and beaten up. He uses Wally during class to intentionally answer questions incorrectly and make jokes. Mr. Ratburn asks to see George after class and tells him that he is not allowed to bring Wally into class anymore. George complies by continues using Wally outside of class.

Fern hosts a meeting for the poetry club in the library. George plans to use Wally to read a poem, but when it's George's turn, Wally falls apart. George runs outside, feeling sad. Arthur sees George and follows him outside. Arthur tells George to read the poem without Wally. Arthur says that the kids want to get to know George, but they cannot because he only speaks to them through Wally. George explains that nobody ever paid attention to him before he got Wally because George's antlers were always getting stuck in his locker or knocking coats off racks. Arthur says that he never noticed these things and that he really wants to get to know George. George eventually goes back inside and reads the poem without Wally. Everyone loves his poem.

At the park the next day, George hangs out with Arthur and all his friends. Before he does that, he gives Wally to D.W. This horrifies Arthur. However, we only see D.W. playing with Wally for a few seconds. After this episode, Wally ends up back with George. It's never explained how this happened. In later episodes, George uses Wally sparingly, but he does not overuse it to the point of annoying his friends and his teacher or breaking it again.

We had to wait almost three full seasons to get an episode focused on George. Unfortunately, the next George-centered episode isn't until season six. The next one after that isn't until season eight. From season eight through season 25, George becomes as much of a recurring character as Buster, Francine, Muffy, and all the other significant characters outside of the Read family.
13. "Francine and the Feline" introduces who?

Answer: Nemo

Mr. Frensky finds a cat in the dump and he takes it home. Catherine dresses it up in a baby bonnet. Cats do not like being dressed up, so this cat takes a liking to Francine. When Francine tells her friends that she got a cat, Arthur is disgusted. Arthur hates cats and he spends much of the episode insulting cats, even though he's never really known one.

Francine brings the cat over to Arthur's house so that he and Pal can get to know the cat. She introduces the cat as "Nemo", named after Captain Nemo from "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea". Nemo chases Pal around the table in the living room. Arthur thinks Nemo is trying to kill Pal. Francine tells him that Nemo is playing with Pal. When Francine and Nemo leave, Pal looks sad to see Nemo go. Arthur mistakenly assumes that Pal is traumatized by almost getting killed by Nemo.

The next day, Arthur and Francine have a study session at Arthur's house. Arthur tells Francine that she is not allowed to bring Nemo, but Francine brings him anyway. Nemo jumps on Pal and they roll around the living room together. Francine says that the animals are playing but Arthur thinks Nemo is hurting Pal. Francine takes Nemo and leaves and vows never to come back as long as he hates cats.

When Arthur tells his dad about the cat, his dad tells him the same thing that Francine told him. He says that the animals were just playing. Arthur still is not convinced that's true. Arthur takes Pal for a walk, but he soon sees Francine walking Nemo. Arthur and Francine try to avoid each other. Nemo gets loose from his leash and then chases Pal, who also gets loose from his leash. The kids run after their pets trying to save them. After Arthur falls over, the animals run around him. He finally sees that they are just playing. He admits he was wrong about Nemo. However, the episode ends with Arthur and Francine arguing over which animal is smarter.

Pal was introduced back in season one. Amigo is introduced in season six and Killer is introduced in season nine.
14. What happens to the Tibble twins in "Double Tibble Trouble?"

Answer: They both get sick

When Timmy gets sick, D.W. and Emily try their hardest to cheer Tommy up. Almost nothing seems to work, not even moon bounces and ice cream. Emily then points out that only Timmy can cheer him up and they're not Timmy. This gives D.W. the idea to act like Timmy. D.W. tries challenging Tommy to see who can open their mouth wider (something Timmy did a lot) and that cheers Tommy up. D.W. and Emily end up playing the Tibbles' favorite games with Tommy, but both girls get tired. They agree to take turns babysitting Tommy, alternating days. Neither girl enjoys this.

One day, they decide to tell Tommy that they are quitting. When they arrive at the Tibble house, Timmy answers the door. Now, Timmy is well and Tommy is sick (Tommy caught it from Timmy). Timmy tells the girls that Tommy told him that they are the best friends ever. The girls feel guilty and decide not to quit. The episode ends with them agreeing to continue to take turns, this time doing it for Timmy.

The episode where they send D.W. to the emergency room is "Attack of the Turbo Tibbles", and I will ask no questions about that episode because I don't like it. D.W. did nothing to deserve that. The whistling episode is season 15 and the episode where they learn about jail is in season seven.
15. This is about "Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival". Fill in the blank: "Having fun isn't hard / When you've got a _____."

Answer: Library Card

This episode is a musical episode. Arthur and Buster are in the Reads' basement. Buster is making beat box noises with his mouth and they are pretending to make a music video. D.W. is not impressed with the idea. After the title card, most of the rest of the episode is the songs.

The first song is "Library Card", which is a catchy song about everything the library has to offer. All of the kids at Elwood City elementary school participate in this one.

The second song is "Jekyll and Hyde", in which Brain reads "The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" and then imagines he's the title character.

The third song is "Leftover Ghoulash", in which Arthur and D.W. sing about the exotic cuisines their father cooks. Mr. Read is proud of his work, but all they want is ice cream.

The fourth song is "Homework", in which Mr. Ratburn sings about his favorite thing: assigning a ton of homework. Buster cannot believe the amount of homework that the class is getting, although Mr. Ratburn says it's "just a little."

The last song is "Library Card (Reprise)" which has the same chorus as the original "Library Card" song but with more verse. The last verse ends with Ms. Turner saying "Don't forget the Dewey Decimal System is your friend," which causes D.W. to say "Who's Dewey!?" several times. She never gets her answer.
Source: Author DrLoveGun

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