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Raining Cats and Frogs (French: La Prophétie des grenouilles, literally "The Prophecy of Frogs") is a French traditional animation children's feature film, released in 2003, directed by Jacques-Rémy Girerd and written by Girerd, Antoine Lanciaux and Iouri Tcherenkov [2] at the animation studio Folimage. It is the first feature produced by ...
December 3 - Raining Cats and Frogs (France) December 5 - Opopomoz (Italy, France, and Spain) December 7 - Más vampiros en La Habana (Cuba and Spain) December 8 - My Little Pony: A Charming Birthday (United States) December 9: I Want a Dog for Christmas, Charlie Brown (United States) LeapFrog: The Letter Factory (United States)
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The show centers around the adventures of a group of anthropomorphic animal friends, Kaeloo the frog (Kaelou in the pilot), Stumpy the squirrel, (Moignon in the pilot), Quack-Quack the duck, Mr. Cat the cat, and as of Seasons 2 and 5, Pretty the rabbit, Eugly the rabbit, Olaf the penguin, The Rules of the Games and Stumpy's seven sisters, who live on a planet known as Smileyland (Pays Trop ...
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TV series (1 episode) 2003 Variété française: Eric's Grandmother Frédéric Videau À la petite semaine: Colette Sam Karmann Raining Cats and Frogs: The Old Frog Jacques-Rémy Girerd La bastide bleue: Mother Nicolet Benoît d'Aubert TV movie 2004 L'origine du monde: Erick Malabry Short La nourrice: Pagevin Renaud Bertrand TV movie Nature ...
Outside it is 'raining cats and dogs'. He 'feels blue', and 'everything looks black', but he 'carries on'. After moving to 'the thousand islands' and becoming a 'beach comber', he still misses Mary, and a tear 'runs down his cheek'. He 'sends her a cable', and she responds with a 'wire'.
The English-language idiom "raining cats and dogs" or "raining dogs and cats" is used to describe particularly heavy rain. It is of unknown etymology and is not necessarily related to the raining animals phenomenon. [1] The phrase (with "polecats" instead of "cats") has been used at least since the 17th century. [2] [3]