hotfoot - significado y definición. Qué es hotfoot
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Qué (quién) es hotfoot - definición

U.S. FOREST SERVICE MASCOT USED TO RAISE AWARENESS ABOUT WILDFIRES
Smokey the Bear; Smokey the bear; Smokey bear; Smokey The Bear; Only you can prevent forest fires; Smoky Bear; Smoky the Bear; Hotfoot Teddy; Only you can prevent wildfires; 20252
  • [[Tahoe National Forest]] Fire Engine 731 and crew (temporarily assigned to [[Lincoln National Forest]]) at Smokey Bear Vista Point in June 1990. Capitan Gap is the pass located in the distance between the engine and the sign.
  • 75th anniversary commemorative artwork from the Forest Service
  • The original Smokey Bear, playing in his pool at the National Zoo, sometime during the 1950s.
  • Smokey Bear eating from the new "honey tree" — a tree that automatically dispenses honey and berries – installed in Smokey's cage in the summer of 1984.
  • Smokey Bear sign in [[Runyon Canyon Park]], Los Angeles
  • Smokey with [[Thomas Tidwell]], Chief of the United States Forest Service, and [[Arnold Schwarzenegger]]

hotfoot         
User:Oneliketadow/Hot foot; Hot-foot; Hotfoot
¦ adverb in eager haste.
¦ verb (hotfoot it) hurry eagerly.
hotfoot         
User:Oneliketadow/Hot foot; Hot-foot; Hotfoot
Hotfoot         
User:Oneliketadow/Hot foot; Hot-foot; Hotfoot
·adv In haste; foothot.

Wikipedia

Smokey Bear

Smokey Bear is an American campaign and advertising icon of the U.S. Forest Service. In the Wildfire Prevention Campaign, which is the longest-running public service announcement campaign in United States history, the Ad Council, the United States Forest Service (USFS), and the National Association of State Foresters (NASF), in partnership with creative agency FCB, employ Smokey Bear to educate the public about the dangers of unplanned human-caused wildfires.

A campaign began in 1944 featuring Smokey and the slogan "Smokey Says – Care Will Prevent 9 out of 10 Forest Fires". His slogan changed to "Remember... Only YOU Can Prevent Forest Fires" in 1947 and was associated with Smokey Bear for more than five decades. In April 2001, the message was officially updated to "Only You Can Prevent Wildfires" in response to a massive outbreak of wildfires in natural areas other than forests (such as grasslands), and to clarify that Smokey was promoting the prevention of unplanned outdoor fires, not prescribed burns. Smokey has also had other lines throughout the years, but these have remained his central slogans. According to the Ad Council, 80% of outdoor recreationists correctly identified Smokey Bear's image and 8 in 10 recognized the campaign PSAs.

Smokey Bear's name and image are protected by the Smokey Bear Act of 1952 (16 U.S.C. 580 (p-2); previously also 18 U.S.C. 711). Smokey's name has always intentionally been spelled differently from the adjective "smoky".

Ejemplos de uso de hotfoot
1. Hire a cook, dine in the laid–back hotel restaurant or hotfoot it to one of the village restaurants over the hill.
2. So for all those things we hotfoot back." In truth, Matthews was the last person one ever imagined might up sticks to America.
3. The coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, said: "A witness summons can be obtained for the production of all documents." He ordered Mr Burrell to go ‘hotfoot‘ to his Cheshire home to retrieve any papers for the court.
4. The coroner, Lord Justice Scott Baker, said: ‘A witness summons can be obtained for the production of all documents.‘ He ordered Mr Burrell to go ‘hotfoot‘ to his Cheshire home to retrieve any papers for the court.
5. President Richard Nixon, apparently, at Spaso House in 1'86; this was probably best for both of us, since my desire to consummate his impeachment could have meant uncivil words, a hotfoot or worse.