Total MayhemAlmanac

Staircase Moose plural/hyphenation forms: Staircase Moose / Staircase-Moose / Staircase-Mooses / Staircase meese / Staircase-meese

x_p5_182 variant

The creature is printed in at least five distinct forms across the books: 'Staircase Moose' (singular and generic), 'Staircase-Moose' (hyphenated), 'Staircase-Mooses' (hyphenated plural), 'Staircase meese' (unhyphenated irregular plural), and 'Staircase-meese' (hyphenated irregular plural).

books Book 4 Book 11 Book 12A Book 12B Almanac (al1)
subjects Staircase Moose

Evidence

Form 'Staircase Moose' (unhyphenated singular/generic) -- b04 glossary
Friendly creatures that can be tamed and become very useful for assistance with reaching things. Same lifespan as humans.
b04:c99:p215
Form 'Staircase-Moose' (hyphenated) -- al1 glossary
Friendly creatures that can be tamed and become very useful for assistance with climbing up things. Same lifespan as humans. The staircase is not there when born, and usually only starts growing once the moose reaches the teenage years.
al1:c01:p296
Form 'Staircase-Mooses' (hyphenated plural) -- b12b glossary
Friendly creatures that can be tamed and become very useful for assistance with climbing up things. Same lifespan as humans.
b12b:c99:p260
Form 'Staircase meese' (unhyphenated irregular plural) -- b11 glossary
Typical foraging formation involves forage pods of 6. They form pyramids in a 3,2 configuration and then the sixth moose climbs to the top to eat. They then change positions and through multiple rotations, all get their fair share.
b11:c99:p347
Form 'Staircase-meese' (hyphenated irregular plural) -- b12a glossary
Staircase-Mooses (or meese) are highly social and community-motivated. Through teamwork, Staircase-meese are able to access the delicious foliage on Makataka trees... Typical foraging formation involves forage pods of six. They form pyramids in a 3:2 configuration.
b12a:c99:p306
citations b04:c99:p215 al1:c01:p296 b12b:c99:p260 b11:c99:p347 b12a:c99:p306
extraction note All five distinct printed forms are evidenced in the records. The variant leads list six pairs but they all reduce to these five distinct forms. One finding covers all forms per Rule 9.