Daisy Duck
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Daisy Duck
Summary
Daisy Duck is an anthropomorphic duck[1]. They draws 639 Wikipedia views per month (anthropomorphic_duck category, ranking #5 of 34).[2]
Key Facts
- Daisy Duck is the creator of Carl Barks[3].
- Daisy Duck is the creator of Jack King[4].
- Daisy Duck is recorded as female organism[5].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as anthropomorphic duck[6].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as comics character[7].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as animated character[8].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as television character[9].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as film character[10].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as video game character[11].
- Daisy Duck's instance of is recorded as Disney core universe character[12].
- Daisy Duck's family is recorded as Duck family[13].
- Among the performers on Daisy Duck was Diane Michelle[14].
- Among the performers on Daisy Duck was Tress MacNeille[15].
- Daisy Duck is part of Sensational Six[16].
- Daisy Duck is part of Donald and Daisy Duck[17].
- Daisy Duck's Commons category is recorded as Daisy Duck[18].
- Daisy Duck's unmarried partner is recorded as Donald Duck[19].
- Daisy Duck's said to be the same as is recorded as Fantomialde[20].
- Daisy Duck's residence is recorded as Duckburg[21].
- June 7, 1940 marks the founding of Daisy Duck[22].
- Daisy Duck's given name is recorded as Daisy[23].
- Daisy Duck's pseudonym is recorded as Isabelle[24].
- Daisy Duck's official website is recorded as http://mickey.disney.com/daisy[25].
- Daisy Duck's relative is recorded as April Duck[26].
- Daisy Duck's relative is recorded as May Duck[27].
Body
Works and Contributions
Created works include Carl Barks[3], a writer[28], 1901–2000[29], of United States[30], awarded the Disney Legends[31], specialised in comics[32] and Jack King[4], an animator[33], 1895–1958[34], of United States[35], specialised in animation[36].
Why It Matters
Daisy Duck draws 639 Wikipedia views per month (anthropomorphic_duck category, ranking #5 of 34).[2] They has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[37] They is known by 24 alternative names across languages and contexts.[38]