I just did some research on this, and her name was Veenie. She was from Venus. She had two-tone skin which was really neat and would float to the ceiling when emotionally elated.
Pinocchio. an obvious take off on the Biblical Jonah and the Whale.
Cartoon network would be the obvious choice on weekdays. Come to to think of it, there's going to be a ben 10 marathon before the premiere of the movie. If that doesn't help, try the cartoon network website or youtube.
well it is possible... i wouldn't understand why... it is simply a cartoon character in a video game... But i guess for no obvious reason someone could hate Yoshi
no of course because it is a cartoon that is NOT romantic
If you like the kiddy stuff- it's all right for you ( sounds like Don K. Reid intro- as for me- some heavier stuff- Chipettes, which are an obvious takeoff on well, here in Neptune"s Tub to dwell, Ronnie, Nedra, and Estelle- and Phil. (Dave Seville is Phl Spector, it is obvious). I"m talking about the Ronettes.
Partridge in a Pear Tree is an obvious answer-Look at all the birds enumerated in that materialistic Yule round!There are seven Swans, Four Calling Birds, Three French Hens, two Turtle Doves-and the title bird- quite an Aviary-l7 birds. Oh I forget 6 Geese a laying=so 23 Birds all up! THIS PART BY HALOMAN339 all the birds are Grey Partridge Oriental Turtle Doves Rooster Common Blackbird Ring-necked Pheasant Swan Shearwater
The adjective of "obvious" is "obvious."
I don"t know if this is what you want as an answer but (Pinocchio) flourished as a series cartoon of some sort that ran regularily in afternoons on television in the fifties and sixties. it is obvious from program listings this was a serial cartoon and not the Disney film rehashed over and over. I never looked at it but saw it in the TV guides. It ran a good number of years, even allowing for reruns, like (Bugs).
This seems to have an obvious answer. The answer was obvious to all present.
No, the word 'obvious' is not a noun.The word 'obvious' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.The abstract noun form of the adjective obvious is obviousness.
No, the word obvious is not a noun. The word obvious is an adjective, a word that describes a noun: an obviousmistake, an obvious lie.The abstract noun form for the adjective obvious is obviousness.
obvious troll is obvious