Forget “Shut up,” because “Clara” was actually the Twelfth Doctor's real catchphrase. He said this hundreds of times when Clara was his companion, and each time it had true emotion behind it. The final one, though, hit us the hardest.
Ooh, fingers. Lots of fingers..." His final line, delivered with a twinkle in his eye, took place as Clara tried to come to terms with the loss of her friend in The Time Of The Doctor. Speaking once more as the actor and the character, the Eleventh remarked "I will always remember when the Doctor was me.”
You may be looking for Mister Fantastic. Fantastic was a word used to describe something good or otherwise extraordinary. It was a term used frequently by the Ninth Doctor, as a catchphrase.
The First Doctor's catchphrase: Come along! Good gracious me!
As he begins regenerating once in the TARDIS, his last words are "I don't want to go".
His name was Hippocrates of Kos. Hippocrates is believed to have laid the foundation stone of what is now known as medicine that too at a time when medical treatment was not only an inconceivable thought, but diseases were seen to be superstitious in nature and was believed to be a result of punishment by the gods.
I'm sorry. I've messed up. I am never good enough. I've let you down.
With a catchphrase responsible for boosting the struggling bow tie and fez industries overnight, the 11th Doctor became the intergalactic equivalent of the September issue of Vogue: anything he says 'is cool' instantly becomes so. And that's fine by us.
Even more than the other characters, we just love how the Tenth Doctor likes adventure and gets himself into troubles. His favourite catchphrase, "Allons-y" is so proudly used by many of his fans even now.
The Second Doctor's catch phrases: Oh, my giddy aunt! Oh my word!
Let's goAllons-y, according to the Tenth Doctor, was French for "Let's go". ( TV: Midnight)
12 regenerationsThe idea that the Doctor has 12 regenerations is first mentioned in The Deadly Assassin, a 1976 episode from the Tom Baker era. The Master - an evil Time Lord close to his final regeneration - is said to have been offered a new cycle of lives in exchange for helping to rig the election of a new Time Lord leader.
Eleventh DoctorThe Eleventh DoctorMatt Smith as the Eleventh DoctorFirst regular appearance"The Eleventh Hour" (2010)Last regular appearance"The Time of the Doctor" (2013)Introduced bySteven Moffat13 more rows
Behind the scenes Before the Eleventh Doctor's 200-year farewell tour between TV: The God Complex and Closing Time, the writers of the 2005 revival of the series explicitly described the Doctor as around 900 years old, despite contrary statements on TV and expanded media.
The Eleventh Doctor, about to die from old age, is granted a new regeneration cycle by the Time Lords, subsequently preventing his death.