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* {{Narm}}: Ji Chang eating cakes made of his son Bo Yikao's meat is one of the most horrific parts of the novel, but it can be darkly hilarious for a Spanish reader due to a unfortunate coincidence: Bollycao (which not only looks similar, but it's pronounced almost exactly the same) is the name of a popular Spanish brand of chocolate-filled rolls.
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* {{Narm}}: Ji Chang eating cakes made of his son Bo Yikao's meat is one of the most horrific parts of the novel, but it can be darkly hilarious for a Spanish reader due to a unfortunate coincidence: Bollycao (which not only looks similar, similar to, but it's pronounced almost exactly the same) same as Bo Yikao) is the name of a popular Spanish brand of chocolate-filled rolls.
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Changed line(s) 2 (click to see context) from:
* {{Narm}}: Ji Chang eating cakes made of his son Bo Yikao's meat is one of the most horrific parts of the novel, but it can be darkly hilarious for a Spanish reader due to a unfortunate coincidence: Bollycao is the name of a popular Spanish brand of chocolate-filled rolls.
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* {{Narm}}: Ji Chang eating cakes made of his son Bo Yikao's meat is one of the most horrific parts of the novel, but it can be darkly hilarious for a Spanish reader due to a unfortunate coincidence: Bollycao (which not only looks similar, but it's pronounced almost exactly the same) is the name of a popular Spanish brand of chocolate-filled rolls.
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* {{Narm}}: Ji Chang eating cakes made of his son Bo Yikao's meat is one of the most horrific parts of the novel, but it can be darkly hilarious for a Spanish reader due to a unfortunate coincidence: Bollycao is the name of a popular Spanish brand of chocolate-filled rolls.
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* MoralEventHorizon: If it wasn't King Zhou's use of the Burning Pillar on Mei Bo for simply criticizing Zhou's readiness to kill a long-time loyal servant and scholar over an interpretation of a poem someone else wrote, it was definitely his bloody execution of his wife, Queen Jiang.