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Snoopy is Charlie Brown's pet beagle in the comic strip ''Peanuts'' by Charles M. Schulz. He can also be found in Charlie Brown movies and television, like ''The Peanuts Movie''. The original drawings of Snoopy were inspired by Spike, one of Schulz's childhood dogs. ==Traits== Snoopy is an innocent, imaginative and good-natured beagle who is prone to imagining fantasy lives, including being an author, a college student known as "Joe Cool" and a World War I flying ace. He is perhaps best known in this last alternate persona, wearing an aviator's helmet and goggles and a scarf while carrying a swagger stick. All of his fantasies have a similar formula: Snoopy pretends to be something, and fails. His short "novels" are never published, and his Sopwith Camel is consistently shot down by his imaginary enemy, the Red Baron. Schulz said of Snoopy's character in a 1997 interview: "He has to retreat into his fanciful world in order to survive. Otherwise, he leads kind of a dull, miserable life. I don't envy dogs the lives they have to live." Snoopy cannot talk, so his thoughts are shown in thought balloons. In the animated ''Peanuts'' films and television specials, Snoopy's thoughts are not verbalized; his moods are instead conveyed through growls, sobs, laughter, and monosyllabic utterances such as "bleah" or "hey" as well as through pantomime. The only exceptions are in the animated adaptions of the musicals ''You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown'' and ''Snoopy!!! The Musical'' in which Snoopy's thoughts are verbalized by Robert Towers and Cameron Clarke respectively. Snoopy's doghouse defies physics, and is shown to be bigger on the inside than the outside. It is also his "airplane." 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Snoopy」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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