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A koala who is one of Elinor's classmates. Her name is first mentioned in the closed captions for the episode, Bath Time, and so far her only notable line within the show is a short cough as Ari delivers his show and tell in the said episode. Leonard Koala The Penguins of Madagascar: Reginald Koala Koala American Dad! Johnny Koala The Outback ...
Blinky Bill is an anthropomorphic koala and children's fictional character created by author and illustrator Dorothy Wall.The character of Blinky first appeared in Brooke Nicholls' 1933 book, Jacko – the Broadcasting Kookaburra, [1] which was illustrated by Wall.
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Mrs. Koala is Blinky's mother in several books, TV shows, a movie. Bunyip Bluegum is a koala in The Magic Pudding. Buster Moon in Sing and its sequel. Nigel an eccentric British koala in the 2006 Disney animated film The Wild. The Australian version of the American Disney computer-animated film Zootopia has a koala as a newscaster character.
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Another hypothesis is that koala was an aboriginal name from the Hawkesbury River district near Sydney. [6] Adopted by white settlers, the word "koala" became one of hundreds of Aboriginal loan words in Australian English, where it was also commonly referred to as "native bear", [7] later "koala bear", for its resemblance to a bear. [8]
This is the list of fictional Native Americans from notable works of fiction (literatures, films, television shows, video games, etc.). It is organized by the examples of the fictional indigenous peoples of North America: the United States, Canada and Mexico, ones that are the historical figures and others that are modern.
^ This name is the main name used in Norman Tindale's Catalogue of Australian Aboriginal Tribes. [7] Each has a separate article under the name listed there, and alternative names are also listed. In most cases (but not all) the name in the left column "Group name" is also the main name used by Tindale.