# | Answered By | Question | Answer | |
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217. | Nobody (stumper!) | You can answer this partly; With a summer treat, If you turn about. Harold may end up with one; I see triple, In colours three. This is may be hardest to find, especially in the snow. | Part 390, pigtail hair. | |
Kind of vague. "Harold" referrs to set 1066 (only set to include all 3 colors of the element), same year as "King Harold" of England. Unsure how "summer treat" relates. Snow referrs to the difficulty of finding the *white* color of the piece, which only appeared in two known sets. | ||||
234. | davee123 | You have in your hand a copy of 886 Space Buggy, and have it as pictured on the box front. How many times can you read the word 'Lego'? | 13 if the minifig is standing off the buggy, 9 if seated |
# | Asked By | Question | Answer |
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216. | davee123 | According to the Lugnet/Peeron database of set names, there is only one pair of Lego sets whose names are anagrams of each other. One is a 1984 castle set, and the other was released in 1985. What are the sets? | 6022 Horse Cart and 3631 Orchestra |
233. | davee123 | According to the Lugnet set database, there are only two set names which are palindromes. One is "Anna", which was used for set 2953 in 2001. The other was used as the name of a town set released between 1980 and 1990. What's the other set name that's a palindrome? | Race Car, used in 6609, and arguably in 1517, 1631, and 1693 |