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You may also be looking for the cartoon show called Smurfs or The Smurfs. For information about the history of the comic book characters themselves, see Smurfs (comics).

The Smurfs are the eponymous protagonist species that appear in the Smurfs comic books, the 1980s Smurfs cartoon show, the 2021 Smurfs cartoon show, and any visual presentation featuring them with the exception of the Johan And Peewit comic book series and "Cartoon All-Stars To The Rescue", where they appear as supporting characters. Their first appearance is in the original comic book story "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute" in 1958.

They are little blue human-like creatures that live in a small mushroom-house village hidden within a forest, the exact location of which is unknown to all but Smurfs, Leaf, and Mother Nature. According to the 2011 Smurfs movie, Smurfs are native to the European country of Belgium and were originally known by their French name Schtroumpfs, as documented in-universe by Peyo.

Physical Makeup

Physically, a Smurf is usually no more than "three apples tall" (in human measurement, probably around 3 inches; though in the 2021 TV series, the average Smurf is shown to be slightly taller than a Smurf Girl; the 2011 movie records them as being 7.5 inches) and has a pear-shaped body with an oval-shaped head, springy legs, and limber arms, with a short stubby tail sticking out from his or her buttocks. The springy legs allow a Smurf to jump to high places or across rocks and branches rather easily. According to the Sony Pictures Imageworks animators, the Smurfs in the film can run up to 10 feet per second and have a vertical leap of 4-12 inches. In the live-action movies, Smurfs: The Lost Village, and the 2021 TV series, it is shown that a Smurf has blue eyes.

The Smurfs were originally portrayed as a single-gender race that are generally born male (though Smurfs do not physically reproduce, they do come into the world by a stork that delivers them to the Smurf Village from an unknown location); while the rest of the Smurfs who are born female such as the Smurf Girls and Nanny (who are roughly of the same equal number as the male Smurfs) have little about their origins being revealed. The Hundredth Smurf, as well as a few female Smurfs such as Smurfette, Sassette, and Mermaid Smurfette (and the non-canonical Vexy and Hackus) are exceptions to this rule, as they are magical creations rather than natural-born Smurfs.

The male Smurf is mostly bald and relatively hairless. He does not begin to sprout facial hair (a beard and/or moustache) until sometime around his 400s, as mentioned by Papa Smurf in "Symbols Of Wisdom". The "non-canonical" Gutsy Smurf, interestingly, may be the only exception to this rule, as he wears sideburns despite being around the same age range as his fellow Smurfs. Grandpa Smurf, being in his 1000s, is the only known male Smurf at present who also has head hair growing around the back of his head, indicating that additional hair growth may be a sign of advancing age for a male Smurf. Because of the lack of head hair, male Smurfs wear hats on their heads. Besides that, male Smurfs also only wear pants, though a few Smurfs (such as Handy) do wear clothing on their torsos; no specific reason is given for this, though it simply may be a matter of function and/or comfort for them. Given that on occasion few Smurfs would wear nothing more than some gloves and a scarf in addition to a hat and pants in cold weather, it would appear that Smurfs are also somewhat physically adaptable to weather changes.

Smurfs tend to age slower than humans and thus live longer than humans. A Smurf reaching his 100 years of age is usually considered a young adult, with relative mental maturity of humans somewhere between mid-adolescence and early twenties, though some depictions of young Smurfs have them behaving more like pre-adolescent children. It is rare for a Smurf to live to around 1000 years of age, as Grandpa Smurf has done. In the 1980s cartoon show, this is due to the effects of the Long Life Stone, which has kept the Smurfs from accelerated aging and their possible destruction. No similar explanation has been given for their longevity in the comic books and other media appearances.

Meat Eater

Hefty eating a hot dog in "King Smurf".

Though it is suggested that Smurfs tend to be vegetarians, there are rare occasions where some Smurfs are seen eating meat-based products, such as Hefty with his hot dog in the 1981 TV series adaptation of "King Smurf". A few plants that are essential to their diets are sarsaparilla leaves, blueberries, squash, and smurfberries (in western-produced Smurf media).

Smurfs are considered highly sought after by wizards, since they are part of the ingredient for the formula that turns base metals into gold, which Gargamel occasionally refers to as the "philosopher's stone".

In "The Miracle Smurfer", it is said that their blue skin cures every human illness.

In the 2011 Smurfs movie, Gargamel prepared a formula made from a portion of Smurf essence, mostly from Smurfette's hair, that had various magical properties, including restoring the youth of Odile Anjelou's mother.

General Behavior

General intelligence

The general intelligence of the Smurf race in whole seems to be based on a level of obliviousness. Examples of that can be found in stories like "The Purple Smurfs", where a Smurf carries an infected Smurf over his shoulder, leaving himself wide open for that infected Smurf to bite him and infect him as well. Or when the Smurfs have succeeded to capture an infected Smurf and bring him to Papa Smurf's lab, but only Papa Smurf was smart enough to flee the scene when that infected Smurf escapes while all the others just go "He bit me!" and basically let themselves be infected.

Another good example is in the comic book version of the "King Smurf" adventure, where the nameless Smurf who would eventually become King Smurf had figured out that the way to get the others to elect him as their replacement leader until Papa Smurf returns is to make them promises, but he has no intention whatsoever to keep them. The others never even considered that King Smurf would betray their trust, and it's only when they are forced to build his castle that they realize this.

Building castles

King Smurf made good use of how gullible the other Smurfs were and they resent that.

In that same story, it's Brainy who most clearly shows the obliviousness that seems to be part of the Smurf race. When he sees the pamphlets promoting the future King Smurf, he goes "How nice of them to print pamphlets for me, but they forgot my glasses.". He also time after time fails to acknowledge that he's not that popular with the others and is genuinely surprised to find that he received only two votes at the election.

Furthermore, in that story, when King Smurf is taking his troops into the woods to look for the rebel camp, he tells them to imitate the hooting of an owl to signal when they found the camp. Failing to understand the seriousness of their assignment, some of them actually start practicing how to make that sound leading to some false alarms. Cumulating into King Smurf being drawn to a real owl that's been hooting and one of his troops going.

"Ah that smurfs it, I figured that was a smurfily good imitation."

Even Papa Smurf, who is regarded as the wisest of his kind, has displayed the same obliviousness, most obviously in "Smurf Versus Smurf" where during the duration of the story he was completely unaware of the unrest in his village, being too engrossed in his lab work. As he finishes his lab work with an astounding success, he is completely caught off guard when he finds that not only has the language problem not solved itself, but that the village has been split in two and the two halves are at war with each other. To his shame he admits to himself that if only he had paid more attention to what was going on, he would stop it before it went as far as it did.

In stories where Gargamel or another evil being swaps place with a Smurf, the other Smurfs don't realize it until later in the episode, even when the Smurf has a different voice and acts noticeably strange.

Another common fault of the Smurfs is that most of them always fall for Jokey's jokes with the exploding gifts, no matter how many times they received one before.

General behavior

The general behavior of the Smurfs as a whole is that they are both helpful and kind-hearted, but also mischievous and very gullible - they will usually offer aid to most anyone they come across, especially animals and children, having a very strong fondness for nature and friendly folk, but they will also trick those who pose a threat to them or simply for amusement, but their gullibility and mischievousness is usually to their own detriment or to the detriment of those they help, as Smurfs will usually fall victim to the deceit of more mean-spirited humans they come across or get other humans into more trouble than they initially were either due to a misunderstanding or a prank that went too far, mostly due to the Smurfs not consulting with their wise Papa Smurf first for advice who usually has to go and save them from their own mistakes.

Because of this frequent immaturity, Papa Smurf often tries to encourage his young Smurfs to be more helpful, proactive and kind and to try and live in harmony with other woodland creatures while also learning from their mistakes. More often than not though, Papa Smurf finds his Smurfs going back to repeating their mistakes, much to his stress, as Smurfs spend more time bickering with themselves than with others, usually fighting with their fellow Smurfs, like Brainy Smurf for being too annoying or disparaging Harmony Smurf's music for being terrible. Smurfs were also prone to jealous in-fighting during the early years of Smurfette's residence in the village before becoming more like family over time, although some Smurfs will still compete for her affection during special occasions.

Smurfs also have a habit of needlessly stirring new problems up in their village without necessarily intending to or simply cause some undesired change due to their own short-sightedness, such as meddling with Papa Smurf's spells, building dangerous contraptions, gambling or even creating banks, all things which Papa Smurf has severely disapproved of. One particular Smurf known as Jokey is shown to be the most troublesome of his kind and tends to stir up trouble more than most. Smurfs often tend to cause some conflict amongst themselves or some change that negatively impacts themselves and those around them, usually leading to an exasperated Papa Smurf having to correct their mistakes, with Papa Smurf often stressing that their irresponsibility is due to their young age of 150, which is considered quite young by Smurf standards. Smurfs are also very competitive, often engaging in needless debates or contests for no reason other than pride, which are also disapproved of by Papa Smurf.

Society Structure and Culture

Papa Smurf New

Papa Smurf, the leader

The Smurfs are led by a single adult Smurf of advanced years, who happens to be Papa Smurf, who is around 542 years old (546 in the live-action movies). He functions as both a village leader and a father figure, directing them in their daily tasks and serving as a mediator in disputes, using his skills, wisdom, intelligence, and power with benevolence. Each Smurf is given a name that's usually based on a talent, an occupation, or a dominant personality trait exhibited by that Smurf; the name can define that Smurf's particular role in their society, though at times a Smurf may seek to expand his range of talents and abilities or to outgrow certain traits they are named after (Unnamed Smurfs are simply called Smurf). Sometimes a foreman would be selected among the young Smurfs to direct the other Smurfs in their tasks, such as Hefty. Why Papa Smurf is the only Smurf that wears red clothing while most of the other Smurfs wear white is unknown, though it may simply suggest leader status. Grandpa Smurf's wearing yellow may also indicate that different generations of Smurfs wear different colors.

The Smurfs' community generally takes the form of a cooperative, sharing, and kind environment based on the principle that each Smurf has something he or she is good at, and thus contributes it to Smurf society as best as he or she can. In return, each Smurf appears to be given their necessities of life, from housing and clothes to food. The Smurfs have no use for money, though at times they may trade something valuable to outsiders in order to get something they need, as Wooly has done in "Wild And Wooly". An attempt to introduce a capitalist monetary system in the comic books' depiction of Smurf society in "The Finance Smurf" has resulted in the Smurfs turning entirely against it. In either media, this is usually interpreted by some readers and/or viewers as the Smurfs promoting communism, though their society is more of a close-knit family than a nation of individuals.

Smurf Village

The Smurf Village

The Smurf community at the present time of their adventures consists of a little over 100 Smurfs, which includes Papa Smurf, Smurfette, 98 male Smurfs of around 150 years old, Baby Smurf, three young boy Smurflings of 50 years old who were originally adult Smurfs around the age of 150 years old, Sassette, Grandpa Smurf, Wild, and Nanny. Some additional residents of their village include pets such as Puppy, a 1000-year-old dog that Homnibus the wizard had given to the Smurfs, Smoogle, a pink marsupial-type animal that has been a companion of Nanny, and Feathers, a crane pet of the Smurfs and a mode of transportation.

Smurfs communicate in a language that they call Smurf, which is just basically a variation of a human language where the word "smurf" is used to substitute for a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb. The language is rather intuitive since only Smurfs can understand what each other are really saying in Smurf.

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Smurfs dancing in a typical Smurf celebration.

Smurfs celebrate birthdays and holidays, including some that are rather indigenous to the Smurf community at large. They also enjoy various recreational activities as well as arts and music, including their local sport of smurfball. Smurfs usually sing the Smurf song, and occasionally "It's The Smurf, Smurf, Smurf" (only in the comic books), whenever they're happy doing something (or just happy).

Smurfs tend to be nature-based in their belief system (though some do hold to the concept of a "heaven" and a "hell", as demonstrated in "Heavenly Smurfs" and in "The Egg And The Smurfs") and have certain rituals that involve elements in nature. Marriages (between male and female Smurfs) are very rare, if they even happen at all, though it is possible that such do happen.

See the article Smurf customs for a list of customs indigenous to the Smurf people.

List of Known Smurfs

See List of Smurf characters.

History

Origins

Smurfing Sing Song

Smurfing Sing Song, the earliest attempt at giving the Smurfs an origin.

The exact origins for the Smurfs remained ambiguous to unknown at best. In various interpretations, some theorized that the Smurfs were nothing more than magical creations created by a wizard, unlike elves and fairies. Others simply regarded them as a type of forest sprite or were mistakenly referred to as elves.

For instance, in the 1979 Smurfs album "Smurfing Sing Song", the song "Smurfing Land" explains an origin of the Smurfs themselves. According to the song, Homnibus (referred as "a fine magician" in the song) is mentioned as feeling lonely and decided to make some little friends by waving his magic wand, which created Smurfs. The wizard even tells the Smurfs where they would live at and the creation of their houses.

Another good example is that in one of the original proposals to the plot of the "non-canonical" 2011 Smurfs movie, it explained about an origin of the Smurfs starting off as toys that came to life through the tears of a sad little girl.

Comic Books

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Gargamel's first caged Smurf from "The Smurfnapper".

Smurfs had been residing in Smurf Forest since ancient times. Generations later, Papa Smurf succeeded Grandpa Smurf after his and Nanny's departure in the events of "The Grandpa Smurf" and became the father of about 99 male Smurfs, though it is not known how they were raised with Papa Smurf as their sole parent. The Smurfs first major conflict with their sworn foe Gargamel came about when he kidnapped a Smurf after previously discovering that Smurfs were a key ingredient in transmuting base metals into gold. When the other Smurfs ambushed the wizard in his castle and rescued the abducted Smurf, this inspired Gargamel's desire for revenge against them. Eventually, Gargamel created Smurfette to be his weapon to destroy the Smurfs during the events of "The Smurfette" by unintentionally causing the Smurfs to fight among themselves by stirring feelings of jealousy within them, though Gargamel's plan would not go into effect until Papa Smurf gave her plastic surgery to change her appearance to look more attractive -- which brought chaos and violence among the Smurfs, who are ready for anything to please her, but Smurfette chose to temporarily leave the village for a time before becoming a permanent member, thus foiling Gargamel's plans.

Johan et Pirlouit Tome 3 - Smurfs

The Smurfs meet Johan and Peewit in "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute".

From that time on, other Smurfs have joined the group such as the Hundredth Smurf and many others, and the Smurfs have met other humans which included their constant allies Sir Johan and Peewit. In the events of "The Smurfs And The Magic Flute", the Smurfs' first encounter with them took place when Peewit came across a magic flute that the Smurfs were looking for that fell into the hands of a thief named Matthew Oilycreep, and together they helped Johan and Peewit stop the thief and his associate Lord Mumford from taking over their kingdom. Noticeably in this appearance, the Smurfs and their village looked drastically different, with the Smurfs donning on pointier hats and their village being located in a wasteland.

In the Girls' Village comic book collection, Smurfette, Hefty, Brainy, and Clumsy discover Smurfy Grove, a village that contains a group of female Smurfs led by Smurfwillow, although their exact origins are unknown. Following their discovery, Gargamel's raven, which he sent as part of a plot to reveal the location of the Smurfs Village, unintentionally found himself in Smurfy Grove, which in turn negatively influenced the entire village -- bringing chaos and violence among the female Smurfs, due to the raven's misdeeds witnessed by some of the female Smurfs (notably Storm and Honey) causing a dispute wherever the raven is doing good or bad to their society, ultimately bringing destruction to Smurfy Grove. Since then, the female Smurfs have moved to a new village.

1980s Animated Series

When Farmer is small

One of Papa Smurf's 98 Smurflings speaks his first word, becoming Farmer Smurf from "Baby's First Word".

As far as the more established history goes, Papa Smurf was born the son of Grandpa Smurf, who left on a 500-year journey to find the purest sources of the four known elements to restore the Long-Life Stone. Nanny had followed after Grandpa Smurf in order to look for more yarn, which left Papa Smurf for the most part alone, though he was taught magic by a wizard named Palladore, who was trapped in stone along with other wizards by a group of druids.

Gargamel Brainy-0

A young Gargamel learns about Smurfs from his spellbook in "Gargamel's Time Trip", spurring his interest in locating their village.

Roughly around 150 years prior to the present, Papa Smurf became the father of about 98 young Smurfs, though it is not known how they were raised with Papa Smurf as their sole parent, but Papa Smurf had to protect his children from an evil imp by the name of Hotep. They would eventually first meet their sworn enemy Gargamel when he was in his late teens, which inspired his desire for revenge against them when they had foiled his first attempt to capture them, but he would try again as an adult where he formally began his endless pursuit to capture them in order to use their magical properties to turn them into gold as well as eat them for his own amusement. Years later, Gargamel created Smurfette to be his weapon to destroy the Smurfs, but when Smurfette expressed her desire to become a real Smurf, Papa Smurf performed the True Blue Spell to change her into a real Smurf, Gargamel's plans were foiled when Smurfette disguised herself as the Lone Smurf and rescued the Smurfs when Gargamel had captured them.

From that time on, other Smurfs have joined the group, and the Smurfs have met other humans which included their constant allies Sir Johan and Peewit. In the 1981 animated version of "The Cursed Land", their first encounter took place when Smurfette and Hefty fled the village from Fafnir - a dragon tamed by Monulfo, and together they helped Johan and Peewit rescue the king and the other Smurfs from captivity. Eventually, seventeen Smurfs have been trapped in time due to the misuse of the time crystals, leaving the future of the Smurfs uncertain from that point on.

2021 Animated Series

Smurf Evolution

The stages of evolution for the Smurf race as seen in "Lab Assistant".

As far as the 2021 series is concerned, there was a time when the whole Smurf race initially started off as brown-furred monkeys -- marking the genesis of the Smurfs. They would gradually evolve over time to resemble modern Smurfs during the Stone Age; the most recognizable members of the race during that time were a group of 98 prehistoric Smurfs led by an ancestor of Papa Smurf who lived in a primitive version of the Smurf Village -- which started off residing in a ravine.

Between after the succession of the Prehistoric Gmurfs and before the birth of Papa Smurf, the latter had another (now deceased) ancestor named Papa Papa Smurf who was once the village leader of the Smurf Village as revealed in "Brainy Gets Ghosted!" prior to the events that would take place in the comic book series.

Non-canonical Smurf presentations

Discovering Your Legend

The Smurfs are about to discover their own legend has been recorded!

The "non-canonical" 2011 Smurfs movie explains that their history and legend has been documented by a cartoon artist named Peyo (who in the real world is their creator) and written in a book called L'Histoire des Schtroumpfs which the Smurfs find in Mr. Wong's Mystical Emporium in New York City, which they search through in order to find the spell to make the blue moon appear so they could open the portal back to their own place in time.

In Smurfs: The Lost Village, Smurfette, Hefty, Brainy, and Clumsy discovered Smurfy Grove, a village that contains a group of female Smurfs led by Willow. Although it has led to Gargamel capturing these Smurfs, their cooperation in their escape and Smurfette's selfless sacrifice ended up bringing the two villages together to mourn her death, only for their love to bring Smurfette back to life. Since then, the male and female Smurfs have been living together in the same village.

Name Translations

The name Smurf is derived from the Dutch translation of their original French name Schtroumpf when their comic book series was first published in Belgium. Since they have become internationally known, the name has also been translated into various other languages, as follows:

  • Arabic: Ų³Ł†Ų§ŁŲ± (sanafer) or singular: Ų³Ł†ŁŁˆŲ± (sanfur).
  • Basque: pottokiak (singular: pottoki), after the Basque pony race pottoka. Early editions used pitufoak, straight from Spanish.
  • Bulgarian: Š”Š¼ŃŠŃ€Ń„Š¾Š²ŠµŃ‚Šµ (Smurfovete) - The Smurfs or singular: Š”Š¼ŃŠŃ€Ń„ (Smurf).
  • Catalan: Barrufets (singular: Barrufet), that in Catalan means little wind evil or goblin.
  • Croatian: Å trumpfovi (singular: Å trumpf).
  • Czech: Å moulovĆ© (singular: Å moula), name based on their light blue colour.
  • Danish: SmĆølfer(ne) (singular: smĆølf). Originally published as "SnĆøvserne" (singular: snĆøvs).
  • Dutch: smurfen (singular: smurf).
  • Estonian: smurfid (singular: smurf).
  • Finnish: smurffit (singular: smurffi) [the word "strumffit" (singular: strumffi) was used in the 1970s, but smurffit became the de-facto-standard translation during the 1980s]. When they were first published in Finland in the early 70's, they were called Muffet (singular: Muffe). "Smurffit" is also a slang word for public transport ticket inspectors, who wear blue uniforms.
  • French: schtroumpfs (singular: schtroumpf).
  • German: SchlĆ¼mpfe (singular: Schlumpf). The original French schtroumpf sounds very similar to the German word Strumpf meaning "sock" or "stocking".
  • Greek: Ī£Ļ„ĻĪæĻ…Ī¼Ļ†Ī¬ĪŗĪ¹Ī± (stroumfakia) or singular: Ī£Ļ„ĻĪæĻ…Ī¼Ļ†/Ī£Ļ„ĻĪæĻ…Ī¼Ļ†Ī¬ĪŗĪ¹ (stroumf/stroumfaki).
  • Hebrew: ד×Øדהים (dardasim) or singular: ד×Øדה (dardas). Dardak is a small child. The somewhat rare Hebrew word "dardas" has a totally unrelated meaning (slipper or overshoe), and therefore should be treated as an invented word when referring to smurfs. It is still used in an insulting manner towards short people.
  • Hungarian: tƶrpƶk (singular: tƶrp), and also: hupikĆ©k tƶrpikĆ©k (singular: hupikĆ©k tƶrpike). Please note that it is a spelling mistake to write these terms in capital letters.
  • Icelandic: strumparnir (singular: strumpur).
  • Italian: puffi (singular: puffo), the name has been reinvented from scratch because in Italian language the "schtroumpf" (or in Italian spelling 'strumpf') reminds speakers of the slang Italian word "stronzo", literally meaning 'turd' and, by extension, 'asshole'. The fantasy name "puffi" is derived from the word "buffi" (singular: buffo, as in opera buffa) a word meaning at same time "funny" and "strange".
  • Japanese: ć‚¹ćƒžćƒ¼ćƒ• (sumaafu - a phonetic approximation).
  • Korean: ģŠ¤ėØøķ”„ (seumeopeu - a phonetic approximation).
  • Lithuanian: smurfai (singular: smurfas).
  • Macedonian: ŠØтруŠ¼Ń„Š¾Š²Šø (Å trumfovi) or singular: ŠØтруŠ¼Ń„ (Å trumf).
  • Mandarin (Chinese): 蓝ē²¾ēµ (Simplified Chinese) /藍ē²¾éˆ (Traditional Chinese) (lĆ”n jÄ«ng lĆ­ng) - blue fairy spirits/elves/pixies; č—č‰²å°ē²¾éˆ (lĆ”n sĆØ xiĒŽo jÄ«ng lĆ­ng) - little blue fairy spirits/elves/pixies.
  • Norwegian: smurfene (singular: smurf).
  • Polish: smerfy (singular: smerf; since the 1990s used as a slang word for traffic policemen due to their blue uniforms and white caps).
  • Portuguese: In Portugal they're known as estrumpfes (singular: estrumpfe); in early editions they were called Schtroumpfs, as in the original French. Brazil knows them as smurfs, but when first introduced in the storybook format they were called "Strunfs".
  • Romanian: Ştrumfi (singular: Ştrumf).
  • Serbian: ŠØтруŠ¼ŠæфŠ¾Š²Šø (Å trumpfovi) or singular: ŠØтруŠ¼Šæф (Å trumpf).
  • Slovak: Å molkovia (singular: Å molko).
  • Slovenian: Smrkci (singular: Smrkec).
  • Spanish: Pitufos (singular: Pitufo; female: Pitufita or Pitufina). The name derives either from "Patufet", a slightly similar looking character (short, smurfish cap wearing) of the Catalonian folklore (basically, the Catalan counterpart of British Tom Thumb), or from pituso[6] ("cute child"). The term "Pitufo" was later incorporated in Spanish slang meaning "local policeman" due to their blue uniforms. In 1974, the Smurfs appeared in TBO Magazine under the name "TebeĆ­tos".
  • Swedish: Smurfer(na) originally, currently more often called "smurfar(na)" (singular: smurf).
  • Turkish: Şirinler (singular: Şirin; feminine ā€“ Şirine) the name means cute in Turkish.
  • Urdu: Ų§Ų³Ł…Ų±Ł (ismarf).
  • Vietnamese: xƬ trum.
  • Welsh: Y Smyrffs (Singular: Smyrff).

Trivia

  • Contrary to popular belief, the phrase that is often used to describe the height of most Smurfs ("three apples high", the direct translation of the French idiom "haut comme trois pommes") was never a precise scientific measurement. It means that something is really small, and an English equivalent to that idiom would be "knee-high to a grasshopper".
  • The Smurfs are actually based on a fictional elf race that were supposed to appear in an unproduced short film, which was called "La Cadeau Ć  la fĆ©e" ("The gift to the fairy"), made by a company called "La Compagnie Belg D'ActualitĆ©s", whom Peyo used to work for as a young man.
  • When choked, a Smurf turns yellow.
  • In the original comics, the use of "smurf" was so frequent that in most cases it is found in each sentence a Smurf speaks. However, so as to prevent the dialogue from being nearly unintelligible to a mostly young television audience, the use of "smurf" was used less frequently in the cartoon series.
  • It was Peyo's widow and personal colorist Janine "Nine" Culliford that suggested that the Smurfs be colored blue.
  • Most of the male Smurfs do not have real names; they are known by their occupation or most obvious personality trait (Handy Smurf, Clumsy Smurf, etc.). The one exception is Marco Smurf.
  • A Smurf is a baby for 150 years.
  • As shown in "Revenge Of The Smurfs", Smurfs melt at 212 degrees, they donā€™t die from overheating.
  • In the episode "Soothsayer Smurfette", it seems that Smurfs donā€™t celebrate all of their birthdays with parties.

See Also

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