... but the phrase is used in the other sense in the TV show Dad's Army[1], which is still shown on the BBC.
Note this excerpt from the site:...in Dad's Army. For most of my generation Fuzzy Wuzzy is associated with Corporal Jones in the BBC TV comedy series Dad’s Army when recounting his exploits with Kitchener’s army in the Sudan. For most of my generation Fuzzy Wuzzy is associated with Corporal Jones in the BBC TV comedy series Dad’s Army when recounting his exploits with Kitchener’s army in the Sudan. The origins of Fuzzy Wuzzy Road's name may be clear but where it comes off SH32 is a bit hazy. The Australian government announced today a commemorative medal in recognition of the service and sacrifice of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels during the Second World War. ... especially if you used to watch Dad's Army … The Australian government announced today a commemorative medal in recognition of the service and sacrifice of the Fuzzy Wuzzy Angels during the Second World War. I think the children's puzzler "Fuzzy Wuzzy was a bear, but Fuzzy Wuzzy had no hair. Googling the song I arrived at : Talk: Fuzzy Wuzzy.
In 1885 General Gordon had his head chopped off at Khartoum by gentlemen branded "fuzzy-wuzzies" by Dad's Army's Corporal Jones. However, it's only used by one character[2], who's supposed to be 70 at the time World War II starts. ... Search for Fuzzy Wuzzy road not so funny.
—Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.26.60.62 15:16, 26 May 2008 ; I had no idea of the songs origins!! Specifically, Corporal Jones' comments about having fought "the Fuzzy-Wuzzies" with Lord Kitchener.
See top entry: ... but the phrase is used in the other sense in the TV show Dad's Army[1], which is still shown on the BBC. So Fuzzy Wuzzy wasn't fuzzy was he?" Cracking the whip Strange then that none of the politically correct brigade have remarked on the term " fuzzy-wuzzies ", popularised by Corporal Jones in Dad's Army and quoted in several obituaries of the late Clive Dunn.
Fuzzy-Wuzzy is a poem by the English author and poet Rudyard Kipling, published in 1892 as part of Barrack Room Ballads.
Maybe I'm being a hypersensitive brit, but "Fuzzy Wuzzy" is as a pretty offensive term in the UK. It describes the respect of the ordinary British soldier for the bravery of the Hadendoa warriors who fought the British army in the Sudan and Eritrea.
Fuzzy-Wuzzy is a poem by the English author and poet Rudyard Kipling, published in 1892 as part of Barrack Room Ballads.It describes the respect of the ordinary British soldier for the bravery of the Hadendoa warriors who fought the British army in the Sudan. The Fuzzy Wuzzy Fallacy is a name for a wargaming theory coined by Richard Hamblen in the September 1976 of the Avalon Hill General wargaming magazine, loosely based on historical records of battles between the British and the Sudanese Mahdi.
is better known despite the Urban Dctionary selection biased votes.