The Great Grammar Hunt

"The Great Grammar Hunt" is the fourth filmstrip, and the first one based on Scooby-Doo, in the Hanna-Barbera Educational Filmstrips series. It was released in 1978 by RADMAR. It was written by Gary M. Stamm, and directed by Art Scott.

Velma takes Shaggy and Shaggy on a "grammar hunt," which involves her teaching them how to properly use phrases, clauses, and complete sentences.

Characters

 * style="background-color:#clear"| Narrator
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Don Messick
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Shaggy Rogers
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Casey Kasem
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Velma Dinkley
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Pat Stevens
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Scooby-Doo
 * style="background-color:#clear"| Don Messick
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Plumber
 * style="background-color:#ffff00"| N/A
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Farmer
 * style="background-color:#ffff00"| N/A
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Mailman
 * style="background-color:#ffff00"| N/A
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Cat
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Unavailable
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Farmer
 * style="background-color:#ffff00"| N/A
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Mailman
 * style="background-color:#ffff00"| N/A
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Cat
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Unavailable
 * style="background-color:#d2d2ff"| Cat
 * style="background-color:#aaffaa"| Unavailable

Organizations

 * Mystery Incorporated

Locations

 * United States
 * Grover School
 * Park
 * Pizza Palace (mentioned)
 * Farm
 * Mexico (photo)

Objects

 * Grammar books

Vehicles

 * Bus

Behind the scenes

 * This was distributed around the time The Scooby-Doo Show was airing on ABC. Both this filmstrip set and the title cards in the TV series use the same font for the Scooby-Doo title.
 * Each segment begins with Velma, Shaggy, and Scooby wearing deerstalker hats like Sherlock Holmes.
 * Scooby's so-called poetry line of "Mary had a little dog," is based on the nursery rhyme "Mary Had a Little Lamb".