After Dexter's laboratory is invaded by Ro-Dent, a robotic rodent, Dexter battles to catch the mouse and destroy it, but Dee Dee's decision to make Ro-Dent her pet may thwart Dexter's plan.
As Dexter gets ready to introduce the Virtual Identity Teleporter to the scientific world, his sister Dee Dee pulls the switch on his invention, turning Dexter into a boy genius ballerina.
They came from another time to ensure that the future would belong solely to the machines. They are Terminatorsindestructible killing engines hiding inside shells of flesh and blood. Tireless, fearless, merciless, unencumbered by human emotion, dedicated to the complete eradication of mankind. But despite the frailty of human flesh, nothing is as immortal as the human spirit, and even the strongest metal will bend by the will of a mother fighting for the future of her children. Dark Horse Comics has long been regarded as the heavyweight champion of adapting film blockbusters to graphic fiction, and The Terminator is one of the finest examples of bringing top comics talents to the expansion of a premier action/adventure mythos. Featuring work by fanfavorite creators James Robinson, Matt Wagner, John Arcudi, Paul Gulacy, Ian Edginton, and more, The Terminator Omnibus Volume 1 features over three hundred story pages in a full color, highquality, valuepriced edition.
The Terminator series is an American science fiction franchise created by James Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd. It encompasses a series of films, comics, novels, and additional media concerning battles between Skynet’s synthetic intelligent machine network, and John Connor’s Resistance forces and the rest of the human race. Skynet’s most well-known products in its genocidal goals are the various terminator models, such as the T-800, who was portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger from the first film, and similar units he also portrayed in the later films. Terminator – The Burning Earth (2013) Terminator Salvation – The Final Battle Vol. 1 (2014) Terminator Salvation – The Final Battle Vol. 2 (2015) The Terminator – 2029-1984 (2011) The Terminator Omnibus Vol. 1 The Terminator Omnibus Vol. 2 (2008)
This volume makes a unique contribution to the literature on materials development for language learning. It focuses on issues related to authenticity in materials development and includes research-based position statements, applications of theory to practice and developments of theory from observed practice. Each paper concentrates on a different aspect of authenticity and many of them introduce the reader to previously unexplored facets of authenticity. The chapters are sequenced so that the book moves from general discussion about the value of authenticity to reports of evaluations of authenticity to reports of the exploitation of authenticity in specific learning contexts. Many questions are raised, much revealing data is reported and analysed, and many pedagogic suggestions are made. The contributions here have been written so that they are of potential value to teachers, to materials developers, to post-graduate students and to researchers. They are written to be academically rigorous, but at the same time to be accessible to newcomers to the field and to experienced experts alike.
When tiny ultra-feminine creatures invade Dexter's lab, he blames his sister Dee Dee, uses his skills to create the hyper-masculine equivalent, and challenges his sister to a battle, but their creations do not react to each other the way either expected.
When Dexter tires of doing his household chores, he invents a hypnotic ink to use on his family, but when it falls into the wrong hands, Dexter is desperate for help.
To give himself more time with his experiments, Dexter creates a potion to release him from the chores of eating, sleeping, and arguing with his sister, unaware that as a by-product, he also created a dumber, destructive Dexter.