it is really boring and crapy its worse than u.s zoos and i got sucked by leaches like 20 times when i went there
it is a way of saying that you look like you live in a jungle.
The pet mongoose in the children's story "The Jungle Book" is named Rikki Tikki Tavi. His owner, Mowgli, was an Indian boy raised by wolves in the Indian Jungle.
He's massive, he doesn't look like an Indian elephant, he looks like an African elephant, he's dark gray, he has long tusk, he makes a loud trumpeting noise, and he's always serious about the jungle law.
"The Jungle Book" was based on India, as it is set in the Indian jungle and draws heavily from Indian wildlife and culture. Rudyard Kipling, the author, spent time in India and drew inspiration for the book from his experiences there.
an Indian python
Indian weather and jungle stuff.
Cultural anthropology would study the disappearance of an Indian tribe in the Amazon Jungle, focusing on understanding the tribe's social practices, belief systems, and interactions with external forces that may have contributed to their disappearance.
Mowgli is the name given to the "man-cub" adopted by wolves in the Indian jungle in Rudyard Kipling's "The Jungle Book" (1894) and "The Second Jungle Book". According to the story, Raksha is a mother-wolf who adopts a naked baby that her mate finds wandering in the jungle near their den after its parents were attacked by Shere Khan the tiger. Raksha names the baby "Mowgli, the Frog" because of his hairlessness. The name Mowgli does not actually mean "frog" in any Indian language, but was invented by Kipling (although many other names in the Jungle Books are taken from Indian languages). The 1933 compilation "All the Mowgli Stories" includes a note on "How to Say the Names in This Book", which says that the "Mow" of Mowgli rhymes with "Cow" - i.e., not the way most film versions of "The Jungle Book" pronounce it.
yes there are fishes in a jungle but if there is a lake, or river around the jungle, because fishes like to live in water not in air...
Its like being in a jungle
jungle - Hindi jāngal 'wasteland' ← Sanskrit jāngala 'desert'Sanskrit Indian Language. Jungle means in Hindi Forest. The word jungle originates from the Sanskrit word jangala (Sanskrit: जंगल), meaning uncultivated land. Although the Sanskrit word refers to dry land, it has been suggested that an Anglo-Indian interpretation led to its connotation as a dense "tangled thicket".while others have argued that a cognate word in Urdu did refer to forests. The term is prevalent in many languages of the Indian subcontinent, and Iranian plateau, particularly in Hindi and Persian.
a jungle