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Sokka also has a tendency to produce or at times laugh at jokes shared by no other character. [6] In "Tales of Ba Sing Se", Sokka's name was written as 索卡, whereof Sǔo (索) means to search, demand, ask, exact, or isolated and Kǎ (卡) means to check, block, or card. [7] The character for Kǎ also appears in Katara's name. [8]
From left to right, Sokka, Mai, Katara, Suki, Momo, Zuko, Aang, Toph, and Iroh relaxing at the end of the series finale of Avatar: The Last Airbender. This is a list of significant characters from the Nickelodeon animated television series Avatar: The Last Airbender and its sequel The Legend of Korra, co-created by Bryan Konietzko and Michael Dante DiMartino, as well the live-action Avatar series.
In the finale, Toph helps Sokka and Suki attack a Fire Nation airship. Suki hops off the ship in order to help Toph and Sokka get to safety. Toph is nearly knocked off the burning ship and killed, but Sokka rescues her and they are promptly retrieved by Suki. She later celebrates the Fire Lord's defeat with her friends in Iroh's tea shop.
Aang uses his air scooter to climb up the wall, before running extremely fast down the wall and hitting the spike, causing the drill's collapse. The Fire Nation retreats while Sokka congratulates the group on their work brainstorming potential group names such as "Boomer-Aang", "the Aang Gang", or the "Fearsome Foursome".
The Fire Lord then banishes the permanently scarred Zuko and tasks him with finding the long-lost avatar. [4] Azula makes a second brief appearance at the end of the first season when Ozai tasks her with repatriating Zuko and Iroh, who accompanied his nephew into exile and briefly cooperated with the series' protagonists.
Sokka finds a haiku class full of pretty girls. While peeking through the window, enjoying the 'show', he is shoved from behind by an ostrich horse and winds up inside, where he gets into a haiku contest with the teacher. Sokka eventually adds an extra syllable to the final line, causing him to be ejected from the room by a large guard.
The two girls basketball coaches have always wondered why some high school athletics teams use the "ette" suffix to feminize their mascots. ... 29.6% said schools should have a universal nickname ...
The episode contains the main characters as well as the Ember Island actors who play them in the play: Zach Tyler Eisen and Rachel Dratch play Avatar Aang and his actor counterpart respectively; Mae Whitman and Grey DeLisle play Katara and her counterpart respectively; Jack DeSena and Scott Menville play Sokka and his counterpart respectively; Jessie Flower and John DiMaggio play Toph Beifong ...