Would it be wrong to have the turtle in that spot? And replace where turtle is now with tortoise. More importantly there's another missing spot, no slime, no legs, and 1 house. What goes there?
Microblog Memes
A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.
Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.
Rules:
- Please put at least one word relevant to the post in the post title.
- Be nice.
- No advertising, brand promotion or guerilla marketing.
- Posters are encouraged to link to the toot or tweet etc in the description of posts.
Related communities:
Clam? Maybe if we are generous with the "no slime" definition.
Clams have a "foot" that they use to move around with sometimes.
Turtle isn't slimy
I'd put the slime as "probably". Their shells can get coated in slime, but not always and they don't generate it.
I GOT IT!! it's a softshell turtle!!
they live in freshwater like lakes so they are slimy, have 4 legs, and can retract into their body
I’m a fan of Fly River Turtles (also affectionately known as Pig Nosed Turtles):
A couple who make real-estate influencer videos?
That graph is also missing a data point at [Slime, Legs, House] = [No, 0, 1].
Yeah, but it can be filled in with "house".
C R A B
Hermit crab should work? It feels more 'house' than a regular exoskeleton
It doesn't have slime to be yes on the slime axis.
Nautiloids? They have a shell, are slimy, and have tentacles ("feet")
Four appendages, is slimy, and has a house...
Is it the average landlord?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautilus with a lot of legs/limbs removed.
I guessing there might have been a https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nautiloid, now extinct that had "only" 4 legs.
Surinam Frog. 4 legs, slimy, and it incubates its eggs in the skin of the female's back for 4-6 months.
If we consider parasites as inhabitants, there are a lot of slimy house quadrupeds.
It's Longhorn Cowfish.
The hexagonal plate-like scales of these fish are fused together into a solid, triangular, box-like carapace, from which the fins and tail protrude.
a nautilus, as long as you accept tentacles as legs
Although, they have more than 4, so I guess they wouldint be featured at that particular point
1 house. 4 legs. Yes Slime.
Two married lawyers with a horse costume.
A well lubeicated turtle
What about no legs, no slime, and a house?
I don't know, some turtles could be quite slimy. At the corner where it says turtle it should probably say tortoise, and at the "what goes here" corner you can put something like a softshell turtle.
Octopus, they typically go into objects and close them tightly like a shell, and no doubt about legs and slime.
Too many legs
They have zero, actually. No arms, either. They’re molluscs like clams and snails and the tentacles are actually a single modified apendage we call their foot. So, by that, they’ve actually got not enough legs and eight “toes”.
A middle class couple with a food fetish?
I'm more concerned with the partials on the scale. 3 legs, maybe slime, and 0.25 house?
Great… now I have to go fill them all in….
🤔
Would an armadillo count as 3/4 of a house?
As a turtle fan it's always cool when you can look at a diagram and suddenly spot a turtle on it! 🐢
It's like looking at the H-R diagram and going "ooo, Discworld would be right about there, possibly"
I don't wanna meet anything that is slimy and has four legs. That is pretty much how games like half-life start.
there's a hidden dot which has 1 House No Slime No Legs
It could be sea coral