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Welcome to the funny world of Bill Whitehead, the creator of the comic Free Range! Bill’s single-panel comics are quick and clever, giving you a good laugh in just one frame. With his unique ...
Talking animals are a common element in mythology and folk tales, children's literature, and modern comic books and animated cartoons. Fictional talking animals often are anthropomorphic, possessing human-like qualities (such as bipedal walking, wearing clothes, and living in houses). Whether they are realistic animals or fantastical ones ...
This is a list of catchphrases found in American and British english language television and film, where a catchphrase is a short phrase or expression that has gained usage beyond its initial scope.
Their cartoons revolve around ever-hopeful Lippy's attempts to conduct a get-rich-quick scheme, with reluctant Hardy serving as a foil. Whatever the consequences were to Lippy's schemes, Hardy ends up getting the worst of it — a fact he always seems to realize ahead of time, with his moans of "Oh me, oh my, oh dear".
Quotes must be from an Cartoon Network original series, and attributed to that episode in the Quote subpage. Quotes must each be from an individual with and existing biographical article on Wikipedia. Quotes should each have an accompanying free-use image relating to the author.
Despite the name it does not correspond to an aleph in cognate Semitic words, where the single "reed" hieroglyph is found instead. The phoneme is commonly transliterated by a symbol composed of two half-rings, in Unicode (as of version 5.1, in the Latin Extended-D range) encoded at U+A722 Ꜣ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER EGYPTOLOGICAL ALEF and U+A723 ...
What a Cartoon! (later known as The What a Cartoon!Show and The Cartoon Cartoon Show) is an American animated anthology series created by Fred Seibert for Cartoon Network.The shorts were produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions; by the end of the run, a Cartoon Network Studios production tag was added to some shorts to signal they were original to the network.
He was best known for his work for Melbourne's The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald. Other works include The Curly Pyjama Letters , cartoon books The Essential Leunig , The Wayward Leunig , The Stick , Goatperson , Short Notes from the Long History of Happiness and Curly Verse , and The Lot , a compilation of his "Curly World" newspaper columns.