The Island of Dr. Brain/Robot village

Through the back end of the volcano is the cool air of the valley behind the mountain. Several robots, who will emerge and do a little dance if you click on the door to their hut, have made their home in this valley. As you look around, take notice of three things in particular: the giant ant hill, the corn field, and the apple tree. These correspond to the anthill antonym puzzle, the hominy homynym puzzle, and the apple synonym puzzle (a play on "apple cinnamon") respectively. These can be played in any order, but all three must be completed before you can move on to the next section.

Antonym Anthill
For this puzzle, the object is to replace each of the colored words below with a word that an ant above is carrying. In the novice and standard difficulties, if you have a sentence correct, the words will change color to let you know. On Expert difficulty, you won't know if you have them all until they are all correct.

Novice
The sentences for Novice difficulty should be as follows:


 * A house [divided] against itself cannot stand. --Abraham Lincoln
 * Politics make [strange] bedfellows. -- Charles Dudley Warner
 * The buck [stops] here. -- Harry S. Truman
 * Ninety percent of the politicians give the other ten percent a [bad] reputation. --Henry Kissinger
 * Our Federal Union: it must be [preserved]. -- Andrew Jackson
 * As President, I [have] no eyes but constitutional eyes; I cannot see you. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * It is not [best] to swap horses while crossing the river. --Abraham Lincoln
 * People who like this sort of think will [find] this the sort of thing they like. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * Let us have [peace]. -- Ulysses S. Grant
 * If I were [two-faced], would I be wearing this one? -- Abraham Lincoln
 * I propose to [fight] it out on this line, if it takes all summer -- Ulysses S. Grant
 * He serves his party best who [serves] the country best. -- Rutherford B. Hayes
 * I would rather be [right] than president. -- Henry Clay
 * (Our country is) in the [full] tide of successful experiment. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * The ballot is [stronger] than the bullet. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * Politics, like religion, hold up torches of martyrdom to the [reformers] of error. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * In America, anyone can become president. That's one of the [risks] you take. -- Adlai Stevenson
 * Fellow-citizens: God reigns and the Government at Washington [lives]! -- James A. Garfield
 * All [free] governments are party governments. -- James A. Garfield
 * The business of America is [business]. -- Calvin Coolidge
 * The world must be made [safe] for democracy. -- Woodrow Wilson
 * Put none but Americans on [guard] to-night. -- George Washington
 * Politics is the [science] of how who gets what, when and why. -- Sydney Hillman
 * Think of your forefathers! Think of your [posterity]! -- John Q. Adams

Standard
The sentences for Standard difficulty should be as follows:


 * At Washington, where an [insignificant] individual may [trespass] on a nation's time. -- R.W. Emerson
 * Every [reform] movement has a [lunatic] fringe. -- Theodore Roosevelt
 * You are [uneasy]; you never sailed with me [before], I see. -- Andrew Jackson
 * In politics, what [begins] in fear usually ends in [folly]. -- S.T. Coleridge
 * They are [playing] politics at the expense of human [misery]. -- Herbert Hoover
 * He can [compress] the most words into the [smallest] idea of any man I ever met. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * This office-seeking is a [disease]. It is even [catching]. -- Grover Cleveland
 * There is such a thing as a man being too [proud] to [fight]. -- Woodrow Wilson
 * If you can't [stand] the [heat], get out of the kitchen. -- Harry S. Truman
 * It has been my experience that folks who have no vices have very [few] [virtues]. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * Indeed I tremble for my country when I [reflect] that God is [just]. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * A little [rebellion] now and then is a [good] thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * I see one-third of a nation ill-housed, ill-[clad], ill-[nourished]. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt
 * Our differences are policies, our [agreements] [principles]. -- William McKinley
 * I [pledge] you - I pedge myself - to a [new] deal for the American people. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt
 * Peace, commerce, and [honest] friendship with all nations - entangling [alliances] with none. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * A [radical] is a man with both feet [firmly] planted in the air. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt
 * The fathers who [gave] us this government were not [graduated] from soap-boxes. -- Joseph S. Scott
 * The American [system] is one of [rugged] individualism. -- Herbert Hoover
 * We have stood [apart], studiously [neutral]. -- Woodrow Wilson
 * An [honest] politician is one who, when he is [bought], will stay bought. -- Simon Cameron

Expert
The sentences for Expert difficulty should be as follows:


 * I claim not to have [controlled] events, but [confess] [plainly] that eents have controlled me. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * open covenants of peace [openly] [arrived] at -- Woodrow Wilson
 * I should like to be known as a [former] president who [tries] to [mind] his own business. -- Calvin Coolidge
 * [older] men declare [war]. But it is [youth] that must fight and die. -- Herbert Hoover
 * The Lord [prefers] [common]-looking people. That is why he makes so many of them. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * University politics are [vicious] [precisely] because the stakes are so [small]. -- Henry Kissinger
 * Let me [assert] my [firm] belief that the only thing we have to fear is [fear] itself. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt
 * What is conservatism? Is it not [adherence] to the [old] and [tried], against the new and untried? -- Abraham Lincoln
 * [forgive] your [enemies], but never [forget] their names. -- John F. Kennedy
 * There [never] was a [good] war, or a bad [peace]. -- Benjamin Franklin
 * Politics is perhaps the only [profession] for which no [preparation] is thought [necessary]. -- R.L. Stevenson
 * [labour] to keep alive in your breast that little [spark] of [celestial] fire, called conscience. -- George Washington
 * The essence of a [free] government consists in an [effectual] control of [rivalries]. -- John Adams
 * My [paramount] object in this [struggle] is to [save] the Union. -- Abraham Lincoln
 * Father, I cannot [tell] a [lie], I did it with my little hatchet. -- George Washington
 * The only thing that [saves] us from the [bureaucracy] is its [inefficiency]. -- Eugene McCarthy
 * Anybody can make history. Only a [great] man can write it. -- Oscar Wilde
 * Whenever a man has cast a [longing] eye on offices, a [rottenness] [begins] in his conduct. -- Thomas Jefferson
 * A lie is an [abomination] unto the Lord and a very [present] help in time of [trouble]. -- Adlai Stevenson
 * At twenty years of age, the [will] reigns; at thirty, the [wit]; and at forty, the [judgment]. -- Benjamin Franklin*