Taily: Difference between revisions
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|Jap=オッポー | |Jap=オッポー | ||
|JapR=Oppō | |JapR=Oppō | ||
|JapM= | |JapM=From「尾っぽ」(''oppo'', an Ehime dialect word for "tail") and possibly the variation of「坊」(''bō'', an affectionate suffix for "guy") | ||
|Chi=尾尾 | |Chi=尾尾 | ||
|ChiR=Wěiwěi | |ChiR=Wěiwěi | ||
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|Rus=Уська | |Rus=Уська | ||
|RusR=Us'ka | |RusR=Us'ka | ||
|RusM=From "усик" (''usik'', tendril) and possibly "науськивать" (''nausʹkyvatʹ'', to | |RusM=From "усик" (''usik'', tendril) and possibly "науськивать" (''nausʹkyvatʹ'', to stir up), with diminutive suffix "-ка" (''-ka'') | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 19:36, January 3, 2024
Taily | |||
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First appearance | Super Mario Bros. Wonder (2023) | ||
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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 push these vines downwards and gain momentum to swing forward, which is how the enemy is defeated. They also periodically release Spike Balls.
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.
Gallery
Names in other languages
Language | Name | Meaning | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Japanese | オッポー[?] Oppō |
From「尾っぽ」(oppo, an Ehime dialect word for "tail") and possibly the variation of「坊」(bō, 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 the diminutive suffix "-ino" | |
Russian | Уська[?] Us'ka |
From "усик" (usik, tendril) and possibly "науськивать" (nausʹkyvatʹ, to stir up), with diminutive suffix "-ка" (-ka) | |
Spanish | Colguiana[?] | Portmanteau of "colgar" (to hang) and "liana" |