his son had a bear and named it pooh bear or if your proper winnie the pooh. so his son inspired christopher robin
if not remember we are robin hood all of us Yes, we are all Robin Hood. But a more direct answer is that the earliest sources of the Robin Hood legend are some ballads dated before 1450, which I use as the basis for my novel The Robin Hood Chronicles. One of these ballads is "The Death of Robin Hood," in which Robin is betrayed by his cousin.
Winnie the pooh (formally Edward Bear) was created as Edward in 1924 by A A Milne and then as Winnie in 1926
i dunno but i think its cuz 'o' 'lil' red riding hood The older tales of Robin Hood have him dress entirely in scarlet. It use to be Will Scarlet was a name for Robin Hood until the story got elaborated and Scarlett became a separate character. It wasn't until Sir Walter Scott that Robin dressed in Lincoln green.
Nothing. Robin is just a short form of Red Robin but most of the time they only use Robin.
J. Milne Bramwell has written: 'Hypnotism' -- subject(s): Hypnosis, Hypnotism 'Hypnotism And Treatment By Suggestion' -- subject(s): Hypnotism, Suggestive Therapeutics, Therapeutic use
No. They only use the one they make themselves.
CHRISTOPHERGender: MasculineUsage: EnglishPronounced: KRIS-to-furMeans "bearing Christ", derived from Late Greek Χριστος (Christos) combined with φερω (phero) "to bear, to carry". Christopher was the legendary saint who carried the young Jesus across a river. He is the patron saint of travellers. Another famous bearer was Christopher Columbus, the explorer who reached what was believed as the Indies in the 15th century, but was actually the Bahamas.It is also clear that Greeks thought it was appropriate, being that CHRISTopher means to carry Christ, and the name carries Christ and the Saint indeed carried Jesus, or Christ, across a river.
no
Yes he does. Robin also uses acrobatics, which he uses quite a bit.
no he did
It depends on the type of book, the nature of the reference, and more. If you're writing fiction and your character is reading comic books, that's fine. If you're writing non-fiction about comic books, that's fine. If you're writing a Batman and Robin story...not fine.