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Pink heffalump

In the fifth chapter of Winnie-the-Pooh, Pooh and Piglet attempt bravely to capture a heffalump in a trap. However, no heffalumps are ever caught in their trap, and indeed they never meet a heffalump in the course of the books. The sole actual appearance of heffalumps in the books come as Pooh tries to put himself to sleep: "[H]e tried counting Heffalumps [but] every Heffalump that he counted was making straight for a pot of Pooh's honey… [and] when the five hundred and eighty-seventh Heffalumps were licking their jaws, and saying to themselves, 'Very good honey this, I don't know when I've tasted better', Pooh could bear it no longer." We learn nothing more about the nature of the beasts in the writings.
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Heffalump

Although this is never explicitly stated, it is generally thought that heffalumps are elephants from a child's viewpoint (the word «heffalump» being a child's attempt at pronouncing «elephant»)[1]: E. H. Shepard's illustrations in A. A. Milne's original books depict heffalumps (as seen in Piglet's dreams) as looking very much like elephants.

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Trunk

The correct Greek plural is proboscides, but in English it is more common to simply add -es, forming proboscises.

Although the word derives from the Greek «pro-boskein», the Latin spelling «proboscis» is taken in favor of the Greek «proboskis».

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Category: Etc