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If You Trade A Pokemon And Then Trade Him Back Does The Game Consider It An Outsider

If you trade a pokemon, and then trade him back, does the game consider it an outsider?

No. Your trainer has an ID and a secret ID that is 'attached' to any pokemon you catch. When it gets traded to someone else, the game considers it an outsider because it has a different ID and secret ID to that person's trainer. But if it comes back to you, since the ID and secret ID are the same as yours, the game knows it's one you originally caught.

If you trade a high level pokemon back will it still listen?

By all means, it should.
Trainer identification is detailed by three numbers: Your Trainer ID, your name, and finally, a secret number known as the "Secret ID." More about that here:http://bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net/wiki/Trainer_ID
A quote from that page states: " If two different Trainers have the same Trainer name, identical ID numbers and identical hidden ID numbers (a 1 in 4,294,967,296 chance if the names do not differ), the game will recognize the two Trainers as the same, so the Pokémon are not considered to be outsider Pokémon."

Ergo, trading your Drillbur back should not make a difference, due to you still retaining your name, ID, and Secret ID, because non-Outsider Pokemon never disobey their trainers
(proven: http://bulbapedia.bulbagarden.net/wiki/Differences_between_the_games_and_anime "In the anime, some Pokémon that have been recently captured or evolved disobey their Trainer until that Trainer is able to find a way to get through to them with the prime example being Ash's Charizard. In the games, only traded Pokémon disobey their Trainer until Badges that can neutralize this problem are acquired."), even if they are too high-leveled.

What do i do in pokemon fire red after i beat .....?

if you have the rainbow ticket then go and complete the sevii islands, then collect all 386 pokémon

In the movie Little Women, when Amy says they trade limes for "beads and things" at school - what are limes?

They are talking about the actual fruit. Remember, Amy goes to buy limes at the market then takes them to school. Then she hides them in her desk for recess and the teacher finds out. Her limes are tossed out into the snow and Amy's hand is beaten with a ruler. Likely the limes were a distraction: many a teacher has tried to keep a classroom's attention while students are obsessed with their new "thing" like Pokemon card trading. The teacher was basically embarrassing Amy, teaching the girls a lesson, and trying to keep order in school. (The teacher had likely already banned limes.)

The girls were bringing limes to share with each other. Amy was getting limes from girls, but she wasn't giving any back to the group. Her sister, Meg, understood the inner workings of "girl society". She knew if Amy didn't take limes to school soon, she'd be an outcast. So, she allowed Amy to use the money from selling rags to buy limes for her friends.

The thing is, only the wealthier girls could afford the luxury of limes -- remember, this is the Civil War period, and many people were going through hard financial times since the men were away. The women had to come up with money, and that was pretty hard to do in a respectable "woman's" position. So, if you couldn't bring limes to school, it meant you were poor. The girls then are just as snobby as they are now. If you couldn't afford limes, you were a social outcast.

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