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・ Gaze (film festival)
・ Gaze (physiology)
・ Gaze (surname)
・ Gaze heuristic
・ Gaze-contingency paradigm
・ Gazebo
・ Gazebo (disambiguation)
・ Gazebo (musician)
・ Gazechin
・ Gazeebow Unit
・ Gazegah
・ Gazeh
・ Gazeh Shahnavazi
・ Gazeh, Lorestan
・ Gazeh, Semnan
Gazeka
・ Gazel
・ Gazela
・ Gazela Bridge
・ Gazela Pipeline
・ Gazelem
・ Gazeley
・ Gazeley Windmill
・ Gazell
・ Gazella erlangeri
・ Gazella harmonae
・ Gazella Peak
・ Gazella psolea
・ GAZelle
・ Gazelle


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Gazeka : ウィキペディア英語版
Gazeka
Monckton's Gazeka, also called the Papuan Devil-Pig, is a cryptid, an animal said to have been seen on Papua New Guinea in the early 20th century. It is said to resemble a tapir or giant sloth, having a long, proboscis-like snout, and some theories suggest it may be the descendant of an extinct marsupial belonging to the family Palorchestidae.
Totally separate from that cryptid (to which the name 'Monckton's Gazeka' was confusingly applied by person(s) unknown) is the 'real' Gazeka, which was the creation of the English comic actor, George Graves, who introduced it as a bit of by-play in the musical, ''The Little Michus'' at Daly's Theatre, London, in 1905. A contemporary magazine described it thus: "According to Mr. Graves, the Gazeka was first discovered by an explorer who was accompanied in his travels by a case of whiskey, and who half thought that he had seen it before in a sort of dream."〔"Judy's Diary", ''Judy, or The London Serio-Comic Journal,'' 22 November 1905, p. 563〕 Graves's idea became a fad of the season and George Edwardes mounted a competition to encourage artists to give sketches of what the beast might look like.〔"Playgoer", ''The Penny Illustrated Paper and Illustrated Times'', 25 November 1905, p. 330〕 Charles Folkard won the competition, and the Gazeka suddenly appeared in the form of various items of novelty jewellery, charms, etc., and was taken up by Perrier, the sparkling water makers, for a series of advertisements. Children attending matinée performances at Daly's during the 1905–06 Christmas holidays were presented with "a materialized Gazeka, the Unique Toy of the Season".〔Daly's Theatre, classified advertisement, ''The Times'', 15 January 1906, p. 1〕 The Gazeka also featured in a special song and dance in the entertainment ''Akezag'', at the London Hippodrome at Christmas, 1905.
Firby-Smith, a schoolboy in P.G. Wodehouse's 1909 novel ''Mike'', has the nickname "Gazeka" because of a supposed physical resemblance.〔Wodehouse, P. G. (1909). ''Mike''. London: Alston Rivers. (Chapter II )〕
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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