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A dog who gets an injection of a special serum giving him strength, speed and intelligence in fighting evil. Rivets generic Rivets: George Sixta The family dog; the strip first appeared in The Saturday Evening Post in 1944. Rocket generic Chacha Chaudhary (Indian) Pran Kumar Sharma: Chacha Chaudhary's dog. Rocky generic Rocky (Swedish) Martin ...
Ripper, Marjorie Dursley's pet dog in J.K Rowling's Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban; Sharik, the astray dog who undergoes a transformation surgery in Heart of a Dog, by Mikhail Bulgakov; Tentação, the dog in the homonymous short-story by Clarice Lispector; Toto, Dorothy's dog in The Wizard of Oz, by L. Frank Baum
Pages in category "Comics about dogs" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. ... The Angriest Dog in the World; B. Belvedere (comic strip ...
Krypto, also known as Krypto the Superdog, is a superhero dog appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, commonly in association with the character Superman. In most continuities, Krypto is Superman's pet dog, usually depicted as a white dog of a generic pedigree.
NANCY (36A: Character in some Olivia Jaimes comics) The comic strip NANCY was first published in 1938, based on a character that first appeared in a comic called Fritzi Ritz. Ernie Bushmiller drew ...
[12] [13] [14] In "one glimpse at Odie's secret life", the dog is shown to be much more sophisticated when alone, and Davis lets "Odie get Garfield back every few months." [13] [14] While Garfield's "playful mistreatment" of Odie is a persistent element of the comic, [13] some strips make it clear that "deep down he knows he loves the little ...
Meet Scott Metzger, a Northern California cartoonist whose feline-fueled humor has charmed cat lovers everywhere. With over 20 years of experience and a loyal Instagram following of 85.1k, Scott ...
Mother Goose and Grimm (a.k.a. Mother Goose & Grimm) is an internationally syndicated comic strip by cartoonist Mike Peters of the Dayton Daily News.It was first syndicated starting October 1, 1984, and is distributed by King Features Syndicate to 500 newspapers. [2]