"The Napkin is a junk item in The Last Stand: Dead Zone."@en . . "The Napkin is a moist piece of cloth with which, together with an arrow, Kian creates a torch. Obtained from a table in Friar's Keep."@en . . . . . . . "The napkin is a miscellaneous item in Fallout 4."@en . "The napkin is a miscellaneous item in Fallout 4."@en . "The Last Stand: Dead Zone"@en . . . . . . "It mentions a \"hole\", which may be a reference to the mysterious note James Sunderland finds scrawled on the wall of Neely's Bar in Silent Hill 2 (which, in turn, is speculated to be a foreshadowing of the holes that are Henry Townshend's main mode of travel in Silent Hill 4: The Room). It is unclear who wrote on the napkin. Like the bar message, it does not appear to serve any purpose to the plot of the game; rather, it can be assumed that its reason is to simply unnerve the player via the direct order for Travis to leave."@en . . "FO4"@en . "Napkin is a word in the Tatatatalalalalauncabarlasoda language. It means \"Would someone please hand me that thing over there to the left?'"@en . . . . "One should always make sure to have a napkin at the ready when preparing to battle the Demon Monsters. Without a napkin, one might accidentally fall off the cliff and lose three health points. As a result of the great value of napkins, they are often kin-napped by nefarious kin-nappers. Should this happen to you, you'd better locate the napkin or another of its kin as soon as possible and wake it up from its nap. Napkins are notorious nappers, you see, being of a kin especially prone to napping."@en . . "Napkin"@en . . . "Upon his release from an Argrathi prison in 2372, Miles O'Brien irrationally continued his habit of hiding food in a napkin to save it for later. (DS9: \"Hard Time\") In 2373, Jake Sisko used a napkin to vomit into after his father revealed that the sauce on their food was pur\u00E9e of tube grubs. (DS9: \"Blaze of Glory\")"@en . . "Upon his release from an Argrathi prison in 2372, Miles O'Brien irrationally continued his habit of hiding food in a napkin to save it for later. (DS9: \"Hard Time\") In 2373, Jake Sisko used a napkin to vomit into after his father revealed that the sauce on their food was pur\u00E9e of tube grubs. (DS9: \"Blaze of Glory\")"@en . . . "A napkin was a cloth used to clean an individual's face. During the Amaxine warrior crisis, a napkin was used to hide a piece of paper that bore the word \"RUN.\" This outlaid plans to destroy the senatorial conference building of the New Republic Senate on Hosnian Prime during the so-called \"Napkin Bombing.\""@en . . "A napkin (also in Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia: serviette) is a rectangle of cloth or paper used at the table for wiping the mouth while eating. It is usually small and folded. The word comes from Middle English, borrowing the French nappe\u2014a cloth covering for a table\u2014and adding -kin, the diminutive suffix. In the United Kingdom both terms, serviette and napkin, are used, with napkin traditionally U and serviette non-U. In some places, \"serviettes\" are those made of paper whereas \"napkins\" are made of cloth. The word \"serviette\" in lieu of term \"napkin\" is not typically used in North American English, but may sometimes be heard in Canada due to French influence. Conventionally, the napkin is folded and placed to the left of the place setting, outside the outermost fork. In an ambitious restaurant setting or a caterer's hall, it may be folded into more or less elaborate shapes and displayed on the empty plate. A napkin may also be held together in a bundle (with cutlery) by a napkin ring. Alternatively, paper napkins may be contained with a napkin holder."@en . . . . . "misc"@en . . . "Napkin is a word in the Tatatatalalalalauncabarlasoda language. It means \"Would someone please hand me that thing over there to the left?'"@en . "A napkin (also in Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia: serviette) is a rectangle of cloth or paper used at the table for wiping the mouth while eating. It is usually small and folded. The word comes from Middle English, borrowing the French nappe\u2014a cloth covering for a table\u2014and adding -kin, the diminutive suffix."@en . . "One should always make sure to have a napkin at the ready when preparing to battle the Demon Monsters. Without a napkin, one might accidentally fall off the cliff and lose three health points. As a result of the great value of napkins, they are often kin-napped by nefarious kin-nappers. Should this happen to you, you'd better locate the napkin or another of its kin as soon as possible and wake it up from its nap. Napkins are notorious nappers, you see, being of a kin especially prone to napping."@en . . "1"^^ . . . . . . "Napkin"@en . "The Napkin is a moist piece of cloth with which, together with an arrow, Kian creates a torch. Obtained from a table in Friar's Keep."@en . . "A napkin was a cloth used to clean an individual's face. During the Amaxine warrior crisis, a napkin was used to hide a piece of paper that bore the word \"RUN.\" This outlaid plans to destroy the senatorial conference building of the New Republic Senate on Hosnian Prime during the so-called \"Napkin Bombing.\""@en . "It mentions a \"hole\", which may be a reference to the mysterious note James Sunderland finds scrawled on the wall of Neely's Bar in Silent Hill 2 (which, in turn, is speculated to be a foreshadowing of the holes that are Henry Townshend's main mode of travel in Silent Hill 4: The Room). It is unclear who wrote on the napkin. Like the bar message, it does not appear to serve any purpose to the plot of the game; rather, it can be assumed that its reason is to simply unnerve the player via the direct order for Travis to leave."@en . . . "0"^^ . "Junk"@en . "The Napkin is a junk item in The Last Stand: Dead Zone."@en . "150"^^ .