The Babel fish is a fictional species of fish in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, where it is described thus:
The Babel fish was a useful plot device for Adams, as it allowed various alien races to communicate while speaking different languages. Adams wrote that the idea that all aliens would speak English was, to him, very strange.
It was revealed in the Quintessential Phase that it also, like dolphins, has the power to effectively teleport itself and its host (in a plural zone) out of fatal danger.
The fish's name refers to the Tower of Babel, a Biblical story, which describes events in Abrahamic theology which led to God confusing the languages of Man in order to prevent the Tower's construction, among other things.
In the feature film The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, that scene was omitted and placed under "Deleted Scenes".
In a demonstration of the huge appeal that Hitchhiker's Guide has on the technology community, Babel Fish was the name used by one of the earliest translation sites on the World Wide Web.
Fictional extraterrestrial species | Fictional fish | Fictional symbionts | Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Babelfish | Babelfisch | Babelfiŝo | Babel fish | Pesce di Babele | Bábel-hal | Babel fisk | Baabelin kala | Babelfisk
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"Babel fish".
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