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Examples
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
Variety.com 2009
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
Variety.com 2009
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
NBC3 - Local News 2009
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Carroll was one of more than 100 adults and children who were recruited to play the movie natives of what author L. Frank Baum called Munchkin Country in his 1900 book "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz."
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"He wanted new straw to stuff himself with, so he went to the Munchkin Country, where straw is plentiful."
Love Letters 2010
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One must acknowledge that Mr. Goldwater has made a felicitous contribution to our political language by his reference to Washington as the Land of Oz. The Senator's six-shooter, for once, is unerringly on target — Washington, like Oz. is physically divided into four parts, and somewhere on the wilder outskirts of Munchkin Country lies the CIA.and its director, John A. McCone, a true Wizard of Oz. whose specialty is dirty tricks.
Who's in Charge Here? Meyer, Karl E. 1964
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"So, should we turn south from here, we would pass into the Munchkin Country, and continuing south we would reach the Quadling Country where Glinda's castle is located."
The Tin Woodman of Oz Baum, L. Frank 1918
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We are now in the Munchkin Country, where we are perfectly safe, and if it was right for me, before our enchantment, to marry Nimmie Amee and make her Empress of the Winkies, it must be right now, when the enchantment has been broken and I am once more myself.
The Tin Woodman of Oz Baum, L. Frank 1918
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