Taily: Difference between revisions

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Line 38: Line 38:
|GerM=Inflection of ''baumeln'' ("to dangle")
|GerM=Inflection of ''baumeln'' ("to dangle")
|Ita=Codino
|Ita=Codino
|ItaM=From ''coda'' ("tail") and the diminutive suffix "-ino"
|ItaM=From ''coda'' ("tail") and the diminutive suffix ''-ino''
|Kor=꼬리잉
|Kor=꼬리잉
|KorR=Kkoriing
|KorR=Kkoriing
|KorM=From "꼬리" (''kkori'', "tail")
|KorM=From "꼬리" (''kkori'', "tail")
|Por=Caulino
|Por=Caulino
|PorM=From ''caule'' ("plant stem") and/or possibly ''cauda'' ("tail"), with the diminutive suffix "-ino"
|PorM=From ''caule'' ("plant stem") and/or possibly ''cauda'' ("tail"), with the diminutive suffix ''-ino''
|Rus=Уська
|Rus=Уська
|RusR=Us'ka
|RusR=Us'ka

Latest revision as of 22:14, October 18, 2024

Taily
Taily SMBW
First appearance Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023)
Comparable

Tailies are enemies appearing in Super Mario Bros. Wonder. They are green pitcher plant-like enemies that hang from the ceiling with vines attached. The player is able to pull these vines downwards and gain momentum to swing forward, which will defeat the enemy. They also periodically release Spike Balls. Yoshis can swallow these Spike Balls and spit them back out at Tailies or at other enemies.

During the Wonder Effect quiz in Taily's Toxic Pond, for every question, there are three different colored Tailies present, one for each answer, and the player needs to pull on the corresponding colored vine to answer correctly. If three questions are answered right, the player is rewarded a Wonder Seed.

Their internal name suggests they were originally conceptualized as monkeys before being redesigned into their current pitcher plant-like appearance.

Gallery[edit]

Additional names[edit]

Internal names[edit]

Game File Name Meaning

Super Mario Bros. Wonder Model/EnemyOnagazaru.bfres.zs Onagazaru From「オナガザル科」(onagazaru ka, "Cercopithecidae")

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese オッポー[?]
Oppō
Portmanteau of「っぽ」(oppo, Ehime dialect word for "tail") and variation of「ぼう」(, an affectionate suffix for "guy")
Chinese 尾尾[?]
Wěiwěi
Repetition of「尾」(wěi, "tail")
Dutch Taily[?] -
French Népendar[?] From népenthès ("tropical pitcher plant") and possibly pendre ("to hang") or pendard ("rascal")
German Baumel[?] Inflection of baumeln ("to dangle")
Italian Codino[?] From coda ("tail") and the diminutive suffix -ino
Korean 꼬리잉[?]
Kkoriing
From "꼬리" (kkori, "tail")
Portuguese Caulino[?] From caule ("plant stem") and/or possibly cauda ("tail"), with the diminutive suffix -ino
Russian Уська[?]
Us'ka
From усик (usik, "tendril") and possibly науськивать (naus'kyvat, "to stir up"), with the diminutive suffix -ка (-ka)
Spanish Colguiana[?] Portmanteau of colgar ("to hang") and "liana"