Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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 ...
Granny Grunty Koala: An elderly koala who is hard of hearing. She wears glasses and wears old clothes like Mr. Wombat. Ma Dingo: The bad-tempered mother of Danny, Meatball, Daisy, and Shifty. She wears a yellow dress and a green headscarf. Mrs. Kangaroo: Splodge's mother. She wears a light pink dress with a flower on her hat.
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.
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 ]
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.
The list only include Indigenous proper and mestizos with an Indigenous parent. This list also includes a few Pre-Columbian figures considered remarkable in the history and culture of Mexico . Ignacio Manuel Altamirano , writer, journalist and politician ( Nahua )
It does not cover names of ethnic groups or place names derived from Indigenous languages. Most words of Native American/First Nations language origin are the common names for indigenous flora and fauna, or describe items of Native American or First Nations life and culture. Some few are names applied in honor of Native Americans or First ...
Canada itself is a name derived from a Laurentian Iroquois word meaning "village" [1] [2] (c.f. Mohawk kaná:ta’). [3] [4] See Canada's name for more details. Aboriginal names are widespread in Canada - for a full listing see List of place names in Canada of aboriginal origin. Those listed here are only well-known, important or otherwise ...