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  1. Officer Shrift. Officer Shrift is the only police officer (and the entire police force) in Dictionopolis. And in addition to being the police force, he’s also the judge and the jailer in town. He’s about two feet tall and four feet wide, and as he walks through Dictionopolis he continuously mutters that the people around him are guilty.

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    Officer Short Shrift is the Dictionopolan cop who is very short. He doubles as a judge and a jailer.

    He is pretty confident that he has "never seen anyone so guilty", and decides that everybody's "guilty" as soon as he sees them. He is not very fair or logical. His examination of Milo is brief, and he keeps cutting the boy off so that he can make up a new crime of which Milo can be guilty. For example, he blames Milo for not knowing the officer's ...

    Short Shrift's name is a phrase, which means "little or no attention or consideration gave to the problem". This is a reference to his personality.

  2. Amid the cacophony the police force arrives – a two-foot-tall officer named Officer Shrift. He blows his whistle loudly and yells red-faced that everyone is guilty. He walks around and peers suspiciously at people, making notes in his little book. He tells the flustered Humbug he looks suspicious.

    • Norton Juster
  3. When Published: 1961. Literary Period: 20th century children’s literature boom. Genre: Children’s Novel, Nonsense Literature. Setting: Milo’s bedroom and the Lands Beyond. Climax: Milo, Tock, and the Humbug rescue the princesses Rhyme and Reason. Antagonist: The demons, who represent qualities like ignorance, sloth, greed, selfishness ...

  4. Chapter 4. Confusion in the Market Place. The Phantom Tollbooth: Chapter 5. Short Shrift Summary & Analysis. Chapter 6. Faintly Macabre’s Story. Since all the words in the market have been mixed up, a salesman shouts “Done what you’ve looked.”. Nobody can say anything understandable until the stalls are put back up.

  5. The Phantom Tollbooth, written by Norton Juster and illustrated by Jules Feiffer, is a children’s adventure novel published in 1961 that follows the journey of a young boy named Milo as he travels through a magical kingdom. Transported by a mysterious tollbooth, Milo encounters characters like Tock the Watchdog and the Mathemagician, navigating wordplay-filled landscapes like Dictionopolis ...

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  7. Aug 31, 2024 · The Phantom Tollbooth is characterized by a warm, conversational tone, with Juster often stepping forward to directly engage with the reader. For instance, when Milo drives through the tollbooth ...

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