Enjoy a fun-filled Chameleon Sliding Puzzle. Rearrange the puzzle pieces and unveil a beautiful image of a Chameleon. Keep Sliding till you win!
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You finished in 16:02 minutes and 862 moves by solving Chameleon Sliding Puzzle
Instructions
1. To play this picture sliding puzzle game use your mouse or tap on your touchscreen gadget.
2. Click "Start Game" to begin your puzzle-solving adventure.
3. Move pieces or tiles of the puzzle game through empty spaces, and solve the puzzle by completing a picture.
4. For the player's convenience, images are numbered so anyone can arrange the pictures following the number sequence.
5. Also, there is an option to select or deselect Show Numbers, Show Background Image, to customize gaming experience.
6. You can change the difficulty level of these sliding puzzles. On the right-hand side, there are three options: easy, medium, and hard. Choose your preferred difficulty level.
7. Also, you can choose the desired number of rows and columns (max 8) for each image, which makes the puzzle even more challenging. After you have made your selection, press the shuffle again button and challenge your cognitive skills.
Now Mrs Keeling had a very high opinion of her powers of tact and intuition. Here was a situation that promised to drive the final nail into the cheap and flimsy coffin of Mrs Fyson¡¯s hopes. Mr Silverdale had come to tea all alone with Alice, and here was Alice writing him a note that required an answer not half an hour afterwards. Her intuition instantly told her that Mr Silverdale had made a proposal of marriage to Alice, and that Alice had written to him saying that he must allow her a little time to think it over. (Why Alice should not have said that, or why Alice should not have instantly accepted him, her intuition did not tell her.) But it was certain that no other grouping of surmises would fit the facts. Then her intuition having done its work, though bursting with curiosity she summoned her tact to her aid, and began to talk about the spider¡¯s web again. She was determined not to pry into her daughter¡¯s heart, but wait for her daughter to open the door of it herself. Alice (and this only served to confirm Mrs Keeling¡¯s conjectures) responded instantly to this tactful treatment, and began to talk so excitedly about the spider¡¯s web, and the plush monkey, and their journey to Brighton next day, that Mrs Keeling almost began to be afraid that she was feverish again. But presently this volubility died down, and she{220} sat, so Mrs Keeling rightly conjectured, listening for something. Once she was certain that she heard steps in the next room, and went to see if her father had come in: once she was almost sure that the telephone bell had rung, and wondered who it could be disturbing them at their chat over the fire. Then, without doubt, the telephone bell did ring, and on this occasion she pretended she had not heard it, but hurriedly left the room on the pretext of taking her tonic. She left the door open, and Mrs Keeling could distinctly hear her asking her tonic apparently who it was, though well aware that it was strychnine.... Then after a pause she heard her thanking her tonic ever ever so much, and she came back looking as if it had done her a great deal of good already. ¡®Yes, there¡¯s an answer,¡¯ he said, and dictated. "There's a wonderful deal of excitement in fastening to a whale, and having a fight with him. You have the largest game that a hunter could ask for; you have the cool pure air of the ocean, and the blue waters all about you. A thrill goes through every nerve as you rise to throw the sharp iron into the monster's side, and the thrill continues when he plunges wildly about, and sends the line whistling over. He sinks, and he rises again; he dashes away to windward, and struggles to escape; you hold him fast, and, large as he is in proportion to yourself, you feel that he must yield to you, though, perhaps, not till after a hard battle. At length he lies exhausted, and you approach for the final blow with the lance. Another thrilling moment, another, and another; and if fortune is in your favor, your prize is soon motionless before you. And the man who cannot feel an extra beat of his pulse at such a time must be made of cooler stuff than the most of us. "But suppose a sailor was dropped down here suddenly, without knowing what ocean he was in; could he find out where he was without anybody telling him?" BOILING THE POT. BOILING THE POT. "Some of them could hardly see out of their eyes on account of the fat around them; and when their arms were doubled up, they looked like the hams of a hog. I was told that the Japanese idea of a wrestler is to have a man as fat as possible, which is just the reverse of what we think is right. They train their men all their lives to have them get up all the fat they can; and if a man doesn't get it fast enough, they put him to work, and tell him he can never be a wrestler. It is odd that a people so thin as the Japanese should think so much about having men fat; but I suppose it is because we all like the things that are our opposites. But this isn't telling about the wrestling match. "You can hardly have dreamed of the beautiful things we found in Canton cut out of ivory. There were combs and brooches so delicate that it seemed as if they could be blown to pieces by a breath; and there were boxes and card-cases with representations of landscapes, and men and animals on them so small that we needed a microscope to see them distinctly. In one shop we saw the whole tusk of an elephant carved from one end to the other so closely that you could hardly put a pin on it without hitting some part of the work. They told us that the tusk had been sent there by the gentleman who killed the elephant in India, and he was having it carved to keep as a trophy. The carving had cost six hundred[Pg 419] dollars; and if it had been done in America, it would have cost nearer six thousand. Skilled labor is cheap in China, just as unskilled labor is, and it is astonishing for how little a man can be employed on the kind of work that would bring a high price in Europe or America. "Smith, I know the whole story and you know only half!" "Berlin, November 10th. (E. B.).¡ªA correspondent of De Tijd in Amsterdam has told a number of details about the so-called bad treatment of British wounded at the station of Landen, according to which the British had been left without food or drink, had been spit in their faces, and our soldiers were alleged to have aimed their rifles at them. The German Government had instituted a thorough inquiry into this matter and publish the result: 'The entire allegation of the correspondent is untrue. None of the details is covered by the facts. The British have not been beaten nor pushed nor spit at, but on the contrary warm food was offered them, which was accepted by all except two. Store-inspector Huebner and the landwehr-soldier Krueger have testified to this." "'I saw how two to three hundred German soldiers, part of them slightly wounded, who were well able to walk, partly soldiers of the Landen garrison, who crowded about the open doors of one of the last wagons, raging and jeering against three seriously wounded British soldiers, about whom their French fellow-passengers told me that they had had nothing to eat for five days. The wounded were called "swine," were spit at, and some rifles were aimed at them. When I told a sergeant that it was a disgusting scene, he answered: "These British swine, they get paid for their filthy work." He alluded to the pay which the British volunteers receive because they enlist as mercenaries, Britain having no compulsory general military service. Before I witnessed this awful thing at Landen, Germans in the train had already told me that they simply killed any British whom they made prisoners. Others said that such a thing did not happen in their division, but one man contended that by his company already twenty-six had been killed. I did not believe them, and thought that they were better than they pretended to be. During the month¡¯s respite accidentally allowed him, Socrates had one more opportunity of displaying that stedfast obedience to the law which had been one of his great guiding principles through life. The means of escaping from prison were offered to him, but he refused to avail himself of them, according to Plato, that the implicit contract of loyalty to which his citizenship had bound him might be preserved unbroken. Nor was death unwelcome to him although it is not true that he courted it, any desire to figure as a martyr being quite alien from the noble simplicity of his character. But he had reached an age when the daily growth in wisdom which for him alone made life worth living, seemed likely to be exchanged for a gradual and melancholy decline. That this past progress was a good in itself he never doubted, whether it was to be continued in other worlds, or succeeded by the happiness of an eternal sleep. And we may be sure that he169 would have held his own highest good to be equally desirable for the whole human race, even with the clear prevision that its collective aspirations and efforts cannot be prolonged for ever. ¡°But¡ªthose raps¡ª¡ª¡± "Yes; how stupid of me to forget it. Well, Mr. Klegg, I'm very much obliged to you for finding my cow and bringing her home. You've got a very fine son¡ªsplendid soldier. How is he getting along?" "Not for a minute. Si," protested Shorty. "You rank me and you must command, and I want you to hold your own over Bob Ramsey, who will try to rank you. Bob's a good boy, but he's rather too much stuck on his stripes." "Now, what new conniption's struck them dumbed little colts?" said Si, irritably, as he strode down to them, pulled them out, and set them on their feet, with a shaking and some strong words. "But you¡ª" Norma began. So no constable called at Odiam the next morning, and at breakfast the whole Backfield family discussed the Squire's loss, with the general tag of "serve him right!" Rate, skate, and crabs. A long shudder of disgust went over Reuben's flesh. He was utterly shocked by what he saw. That such things could go on in his house struck him with horror, tinctured by shame. He went out, shutting the door noisily behind him¡ªthe softer feelings had gone; instead he felt bitterly and furiously humiliated. "And so there is, child¡ªbut I am old; and the aged, as well as the young, love to be talking. Stephen, you must bear with your mother." "Monk!¡ªI have read my lord abbot's letter, and it would seem that he ought to have known better than interfere in such a matter. My child has been poisoned¡ªthe evidence is clear and convincing¡ªwhy, therefore, does he make such a demand?" HoMEÁåÔ°®ÃÛÀòÏÈ·æÎÞÂë
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Chameleon Sliding Puzzle
Enjoy a fun-filled Chameleon Sliding Puzzle. Rearrange the puzzle pieces and unveil a beautiful image of a Chameleon. Keep Sliding till you win!
Time: 00:00
Moves: 0
Solve the Puzzle
Time: 00:00
Moves: 0
Shuffle
Rows
Columns
Preview :
Instructions
1. To play this picture sliding puzzle game use your mouse or tap on your touchscreen gadget.
2. Click "Start Game" to begin your puzzle-solving adventure.
3. Move pieces or tiles of the puzzle game through empty spaces, and solve the puzzle by completing a picture.
4. For the player's convenience, images are numbered so anyone can arrange the pictures following the number sequence.
5. Also, there is an option to select or deselect Show Numbers, Show Background Image, to customize gaming experience.
6. You can change the difficulty level of these sliding puzzles. On the right-hand side, there are three options: easy, medium, and hard. Choose your preferred difficulty level.
7. Also, you can choose the desired number of rows and columns (max 8) for each image, which makes the puzzle even more challenging. After you have made your selection, press the shuffle again button and challenge your cognitive skills.
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