Harebrained News

One-to-One matching

The content for the following drag-and-drop exercise is taken from The Book of Imaginary Beings by Jorge Luis Borges with Margarita Gurerrero, Penguin Books edition, 2005. Translated by Andrew Hurley. Originally published as El libro de los seres imaginarios. ©1967 by Editorial Kier, S.A., Buenos Aires.

Drag the description on the right to match the creature's name on the left.

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Multiple-to-One matching

The content for the following drag-and-drop exercise is referenced from Mythical Beasts, edited by John Cherry. ©1995 The Trustees of the British Museum. Published by British Museum Press.

Drag the description on the right to match the type of creature on the left.

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Drag-and-drop graphics

The content for the following drag-and-drop exercise is referenced from Big Book of Dragons, Monsters, and Other Mythical Creatures, by Ernst and Johanna Lehner, a Dover edition published in 2004, a republication of A Fantastic Bestiary: Beasts and Monsters in Myth and Folklore, originally published by Tudor Publishing Company, New York, in 1969.

Drag the creature on the right to match the type on the left.

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Drag-and-drop labels

The etching used in the following drag-and-drop exercise is taken from Big Book of Dragons, Monsters, and Other Mythical Creatures, by Ernst and Johanna Lehner, a Dover edition published in 2004, a republication of A Fantastic Bestiary: Beasts and Monsters in Myth and Folklore, originally published by Tudor Publishing Company, New York, in 1969. The book is a Dover Pictoral Archive of clip-art.

The text is from my own imagination. Also, I'm wondering how one is supposed to destroy Horcruxes with the fangs of this beast since it obviously has no fangs.

Drag the label on the right to identify the Basilisk system on the right.

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