Yes, it was for a car company
because fuzzy wazzy was fuzzy
No, according to the popular children's rhyme, "fuzzy wuzzy had no hair." That is why his name was so odd.
Because they were so Fuzzy Wuzzy people and they wanted to help the Australian people.
Aussies like New Guineans, because they are fuzzy wuzzy angels
The Kokoda Track was vital to Australia during WWII, as the Japanese troops were repelled by the Australian and US troops during the Kokoda Trail campaign. Japan had already landed troops on the island of New Guinea, and sought to head south through the Owen Stanley Ranges to establish bases on the southern coast of the island. The PNG natives offered invaluable assistance to the Allied troops along the Kokoda Track, often at great risk to themselves. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels were a tribe of Papua New Guinean native people nicknamed for their thick, woolly hair. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels helped Australian soldiers during WWII in the 1942 battles against invading Japanese troops. They lived in the villages along the Kokoda Track and initially knew nothing of the war until Australian troops began moving through their area. They carried wounded out of the jungle, on stretchers and on their backs, and nursed them back to health where possible, at the risk of their own lives. They also carried supplies and equipment for the Australian troops. Stories have also emerged of these natives rescuing US airmen who were shot out of the sky. They evacuated allied troops from compromising situations during alerts of Japanese invasions, or hid them from advancing troops. Not only did they nurse the wounded back to health, but many Allied troops fell victim to the diseases of the tropical jungle, such as malaria - the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels also nursed them through that.
Fuzzy wuzzy had no hair, fuzzy wuzzy wasn't fuzzy was he.
Fuzzy wuzzy was a bear But Fuzzy wuzzy had no hair So he wasn't fuzzy, wuzzy?
because fuzzy wazzy was fuzzy
bear fuzzy wuzzy had no hair...
Fuzzy-Wuzzy (a poem by English author and poet Rudyard in 1892) refers to the Hadenoda warriors who fought the British army in North Africa and the respect of the ordinary British soldier toward them. The name "Fuzzy-Wuzzy" could be entirely English in origin, or it could combine some sort of Arabic pun (by chance based on ghazī, "warrior"). It refers to their butter-matted hair that gave them a unique "fuzzy" look.
Fuzzy-Wuzzy was created in 1892.
Fuzzy Wuzzy - song - was created in 1944.
Yes, "fuzzy" and "wuzzy" rhyme with each other. Although of course, "wuzzy" isn't a word that is in the dictionary, so if you are using it out of the context of the "Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear" rhyme, you might want to rethink.
One tongue twister from Florida is: "Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear, Fuzzy Wuzzy had no hair, Fuzzy Wuzzy wasn't very fuzzy, was he?"
Fuzzy Wuzzy rhymes with muzzy, because both words end in a "-uzzy" sound.
yes, yes he was....
No, according to the popular children's rhyme, "fuzzy wuzzy had no hair." That is why his name was so odd.