to translate any language
The babel fish allows you to understand different languages when you hear them.
an angler fish
The fish that eats Marlin's eggs is a barracuda, and the fish Marlin and Dory encounter deep down is a anglerfish
It is a shoal of fish.
Oscar is a type of fish so he is a Oscar fish
No Dolphon is the National Sea Animal of India. Not National Fish. National Fish is not known
to translate any language The babel fish allows you to understand different languages when you hear them.
BAY-BULL see hitchhikers guide to the galaxy like the tower of babel that features in the bible
A 'babel fish' is a fictional creature that features in 'the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy'. it is a small aquatic creature that feeds on brainwaves. when 'stuck in your ear' it translates these brain waves into English thus making alien languages sond English and allowing aliens to understand English as well.just so you know, it's pronounced BAY-BULL NOTBABBLE.
The Babel fish was a fish (really!) that was placed in a person's ear, thus enabling him to understand any language in the galaxy. Somehow, by placing the fish in one's ear, it translated the language.
Yes, Douglas Adams is credited with inventing the term ''Babel Fish'' in his book ''The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy.'' The Babel Fish is a small, yellow, leech-like creature that serves as a universal translator, allowing characters in the story to understand any language.
There are actually five books to the Hitchhikers' Trilogy! The first three are "The Hitchiker's Guide to the Galaxy," "The Restaurant at the End of the Universe." and "So Long and Thanks for all the Fish!" The last two are "Mostly Harmless" and "Sorry for the Inconveniences."
The Babel Fish is a fictional creature from Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" series. It lives in the ear canal and provides instant translation for all languages, making communication across species possible.
Babel fish don't actually live in any ocean. They are fictional, from the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. In that book it explains that they feed on brain-wave energy, and when inserted into the ear, allow you to understand any language... so I'm not even think in that fictional universe that they live in an ocean, but if they do, it doesn't tell us any more about it in the Hitchhiker's series.
There are five books in the inaccurately named "Trilogy": in no particular order, they are: 1 The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy 2 The Restaurant At The End Of The Universe 3. Life, The Universe, and Everything 4. So Long, And Thanks For All The Fish 5 Mostly Harmless Some also consider the short story "Young Zaphod Plays It Safe" to be part of the trilogy, but it really affect the story in no way whatsoever, it just shares the same universe. "The Salmon Of Doubt; Hitchhiking The Galaxy One Last Time" is also not a part of the "Trilogy".
First you have to get your hands on a spaceship with hyper-drive. Then you have to take all the driving tests in the galaxy, (this is estimated to take you twenty years at the moment, but new tests are being added daily). Done that, boy you must be thirsty. Right, armed with your copy of the hitchhikers guide to the galaxy and a babel fish you can now assemble all the ingredients, (estimated to take 250 years). Why not say Stuff this, I'm off to the off-licence instead. Since the Pangalactic gargle blaster is a drink just tell everyone you have the required driving tests then mix the drink anyway.
In the book, it is relatively clear. The speaker is a dolphin leaving Earth before it is to be blown up for the creation of the intergalactic highway. He is thanking the humans for allowing the dolphins (who are an alien race) eat the fish in Earth's seas. So, "the fish" are actual swimming fish.
the most advanced life forms on earth were the mice - it doesn't mention what they said before leaving earth. however, the dolphins (2nd most advanced) said "so long, and thanks for all the fish".