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Baby Bear, Baby Bear, What Do You See? is a 2007 children's picture book by Bill Martin Jr. and Eric Carle. [1] First published by Henry Holt and Company , [ 2 ] it is the fourth and final companion title to Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?
In rhyming text, various endangered animals are asked the question "What do you see?". The list of animals includes a giant panda, a bald eagle, a wild water buffalo, a spider monkey, a green sea turtle, a macaroni penguin, a sea lion, a red wolf, a whooping crane and a black panther.
Baby Huey is a gigantic and naïve duckling cartoon character. He was created by Martin Taras for Paramount Pictures ' Famous Studios , and became a Paramount cartoon star during the 1950s. Huey first appeared in Quack-a-Doodle-Doo , a Paramount Noveltoon theatrical short produced in 1949 and released in 1950.
Care Bears are multi-colored bears, painted in 1981 by artist Elena Kucharik to be used on greeting cards from American Greetings. [1] They were turned into plush teddy bears and featured in The Care Bears in the Land Without Feelings (1983) and The Care Bears Battle the Freeze Machine (1984) before headlining their own television series called Care Bears from 1985 to 1988.
Br'er Fox and Br'er Bear (also spelled Brer Fox and Brer Bear, / ˈ b r ɛər /) are fictional characters from African-American oral traditions popular in the Southern United States. These characters have been recorded by many different folklorists, but are most well-known from the folktales adapted and compiled by Joel Chandler Harris ...
The ultra-rare Princess Diana Beanie Baby, for example, is appraised at $90,000. While only a few Princess Diana Beanie Babies exist, one common edition, Valentino, can actually be worth up to ...
[3] [10] [18] Sister Bear was introduced in the 1974 book The Berenstain Bears' New Baby. Honey Bear's imminent arrival was announced in early 2000 in The Birds, the Bees, and the Berenstain Bears, along with a reader contest to name the new bear; her birth was featured later that year in The Berenstain Bears and Baby Makes Five. [18] [19]
In Finland, the brown bear, which is also nicknamed as the "king of the forest" by the Finns, [28] [29] is even so common that it is the country's official national mammal, [30] and occur on the coat of arms of the Satakunta region is a crown-headed black bear carrying a sword, [31] possibly referring to the regional capital city of Pori, whose ...