Fifi

Fifi may refer to:

Common usage

  • Fifi, diminutive form of Josephine
  • Entertainment

  • Fifi (album), the third studio album by the Dutch band the Heideroosjes
  • Fifi and the Flowertots, a British stop-motion animated children's television series first broadcast in 2005
  • Fifi (Open Season), the main antagonist in Open Season 2 and one of the supporting heroes for the whole series
  • Fifi Blows Her Top, the 184th short subject starring American slapstick comedy team the Three Stooges
  • Fifi La Fume (also called Fifi Le Fume), a fictional anthropomorphic skunk featured in the Warner Brothers 1990–1995 animated series Tiny Toon Adventures
  • Fifi the Duck, a Howard the Duck character, and an ally of Howard; first appeared in Howard the Duck #17 in 1977
  • Fifi the Peke, a fictional character created by The Walt Disney Company
  • Ingrid Finger (nicknamed Fifi), German beauty queen who became the first representative from her country to win the Miss International pageant in 1965
  • Mademoiselle Fifi (disambiguation)
  • Fur Fighters

    Fur Fighters is a video game developed by Bizarre Creations and published by Acclaim for the Dreamcast in 2000, then later for Microsoft Windows. The game was designed very much as a standard third-person shooter, but used a world populated by cute little animals as its setting. As a result, the game's depiction of violence is very cartoon-like without losing any of its intensity. In 2001, an updated version for the PlayStation 2 was released as Fur Fighters: Viggo's Revenge. On July 20, 2012, members of Muffin Games, ex-Bizarre Creations staff, announced a conversion for iPad, called Fur Fighters: Viggo on Glass.

    Gameplay

    Kasakela Chimpanzee Community

    The Kasakela chimpanzee community is a habituated community of wild eastern chimpanzees that lives in Gombe National Park near Lake Tanganyika in Tanzania. The community was the subject of Dr Jane Goodall's pioneering study that began in 1960, and studies have continued ever since. As a result, the community has been instrumental in the study of chimpanzees, and has been popularized in several books and documentaries. The community's popularity was enhanced by Dr Goodall's practice of giving names to the chimpanzees she was observing, in contrast to the typical scientific practice of identifying the subjects by number. Dr Goodall generally used a naming convention in which infants were given names starting with the same letter as their mother, allowing the recognition of matrilineal lines.

    Podcasts:

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