Swahili, it's a language in South Africa :)
Simba is lion in Swahili. It's for this reason that the main character of Disney's The Lion King (1994), a young lion, is named Simba. The movie uses several Swahili words and phrases that the writers learned while researching for the film.
The differences between The Lion King and The Odyssey are that:At the start of the narrative works, Simba was born to be the future king of the Pridelands while Odysseus was the King of Ithaca.Odysseus was away from home because of the Trojan War while Simba was sent away from home because he was driven out by the hyenas.The Odyssey includes supernatural beings such as gods and goddesses while The Lion King uses a ghost.
The lion uses the same fertilisation as the human does.
well i think Rafiki uses turtle shells when he s meditating. but i don t know for sure because i think when he was on the movie he used turtle shells. and fruits. you know i am just a Mongolian 9 year old fan you know!!! so ask someone who knows that.
food lion
It Is when someone uses bad language ALL THE TIME
Rafiki! He is pretty awesome!!
The similiarities between The Lion King and The Odyssey are that:Simba and Odysseus are both protagonists born into royal status. Simba was born as the prince and is the future king of the Pridelands while Odysseus was the King of Ithaca.Both protagonists were away from home for a long period of time as Odysseus was away from home because of the Trojan War while Simba was away from home because he was driven out by the hyenas, and chose to live in self exile.Both heroes were thought to be dead by their relatives.Both Simba and Odysseus return to their homeland and defeated those who tried to take their rightful throne.
A primary language is the first language or mother tongue that an individual learns and uses for communication from an early age. It is the language in which a person has the strongest proficiency and comfort level for expressing thoughts and ideas.
it uses figurative language but it also uses literal language
The way a writer uses language to create meaning.Example: Cormac McCarthy uses a particular style in his novels. He uses short sentences and powerful word choice.
No, not in canon/official story, as in in the movies. But only in the book universe of the franchise. Ever since the first movie was released, there's been a son in the book universe, but the first film's makers confirmed on the commentary track of the 1995 laserdisc and the 2003 DVD that the cub at the end of the film is Fluffy as in has no real name and no gender, resulting in its most official gender and real name to be the girl Kiara from the official movie sequel The Lion King 2: Simba's Pride. To the film itself they simply redesigned the cub and its ceremony. Doing that is called retroactive continuity which is very common in works of fictional series. But the sequel's makers did use "Fluffy" for baby Kiara in their official movie trailer--which was in order to make the point that in the movie universe the cub at the end of the first film is indeed Kiara and no one else.In the movies Kiara is Simba's first and only child. In the books Simba's first and only child is usually a son - as in, there are books wherein it is said to be a girl. And some books wherein the gender isn't confiemd. As in for the book universe, it totally depends on the author's choice. The books are only a collection of outsider-written "fanfiction", approved by the marketting device.