I just giggled out loud because I first typed 'mockingbird' as 'mockingbard' and now all I can think about is a bard in some fantasy film/book who just keeps mocking everyone in his songs. Good morning, time for more coffee.
Em ... it is. I allready knew about it ( cant remember if it was before or around the same time of the movies)> But is is pretty certain you just blurted it outthere without even checking you were right.
You think quizmaster would just randmomly put names here?
Btw in my country the name is veelvraat, which sort of means eats-a-lot. veel=a lot/much/many and vraat is well, a kind of rude form of eating when you eatn very fast and messy. So it sort of means glutton.
And I guess the english names has some similar connections, because there is the saying to wolve down. when you eat fast and messy.
And you know.... the tasmanian devil is a real animal too... (as is roadrunner...) look em up.
Funny story: apparently Hugh Jackman also didn't know that a wolverine was a real animal when he was cast in the role, and at first was trying to play him like a wolf.
"The film's name is based on the nickname for Durham, North Carolina, since 1874, when W. T. Blackwell and Company named its product "Bull" Durham tobacco, which soon became a well-known trademark. In 1898, James B. Duke purchased the company and renamed it the American Tobacco Company. By this time, the nickname "Bull City" had already stuck."
Insects, mammals, reptiles, birds and fish are all members of the animal kingdom
You think quizmaster would just randmomly put names here?
And I guess the english names has some similar connections, because there is the saying to wolve down. when you eat fast and messy.
And you know.... the tasmanian devil is a real animal too... (as is roadrunner...) look em up.
https://www.google.com/search?q=wolverine+animal&rlz=1C1GCEA_enUS812US812&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwixovb8kojhAhUCP60KHRPXBmEQ_AUIDigB&biw=1366&bih=625&safe=active&ssui=on#imgrc=S0iSSzHpgSdozM:
Lion King???
Wolverine??
"The film's name is based on the nickname for Durham, North Carolina, since 1874, when W. T. Blackwell and Company named its product "Bull" Durham tobacco, which soon became a well-known trademark. In 1898, James B. Duke purchased the company and renamed it the American Tobacco Company. By this time, the nickname "Bull City" had already stuck."