With no explanation, label text_A→text_B with either "DON'T KNOW", "NO" or "YES".
text_A: Hyenas groom themselves often like felids and viverrids, and their way of licking their genitals is very cat-like (sitting on the lower back, legs spread with one leg pointing vertically upward). In contrast to other feliforms, however, hyenas do not engage in cleaning of their own faces. They defecate in the same manner as other Carnivora, though they never raise their legs as canids do when urinating, as urination serves no territorial function for them. Instead, hyenas mark their territories using their anal glands, a trait found also in viverrids and mustelids, but not canids and felids. When attacked by lions or dogs, striped and brown hyenas will feign death, though the spotted hyena will defend itself ferociously. The spotted hyena is very vocal, producing a number of different sounds consisting of whoops, grunts, groans, lows, giggles, yells, growls, laughs and whines. The striped hyena is comparatively silent, its vocalisations being limited to a chattering laugh and howling.
text_B: If you heard that an early script of Disney's "The Lion King" had the buffoonish hyenas obsessively holding up hand mirrors and wiping their faces and grooming their whiskers, would you say that this was cut out simply because the scientific accuracy (and thus, the humor) would be lost on most audience members?
NO.