This Trinomial name Canis lupus familiaris The dog is a canine carnivorous mammal that has been domesticated for somewhere between 14,000 and 150,000 years. In this time, the dog has developed into hundreds of breeds with a great degree of variation. For example, heights ranging from just a few...
dog has been dressed in Human beings are defined variously in biological, spiritual, and cultural terms, or in combinations thereof. Biologists classify human beings as Homo sapiens (Latin for knowing man), a primate species of mammal with a highly developed brain, belonging to the family of great apes, along with chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans...
human Fashion accessories and theur jewelry counterpart referred to as costume jewelry are items that used as fashions complementary. Accessories help to bring up the spot that one wants to highlight in a dress or apparel. They can also help to hide some weaknesses part of a dress. Trends are...
accessories for This article discusses humour in terms of comedy and laughter. For ancient Greek theories of humour in physiology, psychology and medicine, see four humours. Humour (humor in American English) is a form of entertainment and a form of human communication, intended to make people laugh and feel happy. The origins...
humorous effect. Anthropomorphism, also referred to as personification or prosopopeia, is the attribution of Human beings are defined variously in biological, spiritual, and cultural terms, or in combinations thereof. Biologists classify human beings as Homo sapiens (Latin for knowing man), a primate species of mammal with a highly developed brain, belonging to the family of great apes, along with chimpanzees, bonobos, gorillas, and orangutans...
human characteristics to inanimate objects, Phyla Porifera (sponges) Ctenophora (comb jellies) Cnidaria Placozoa Bilateria Acoelomorpha Orthonectida Rhombozoa ? Myxozoa Superphylum Deuterostomia Chordata (vertebrates, etc.) Hemichordata (acorn worms) Echinodermata ? Chaetognatha (arrow worms) Superphylum Ecdysozoa Kinorhyncha Loricifera ...
animals, forces of For alternative meanings, see nature (disambiguation). The deepest visible-light image of the universe, the Hubble Ultra Deep Field. Image Credit: NASA, ESA, S. Beckwith (STScI) and the HUDF team. The first few hydrogen atom electron orbitals shown as cross-sections with color-coded probability density Aphthona flava flea beetle...
nature, and others. "Anthropomorphism" comes from two The Greek language (Greek Ελληνικά, IPA – Hellenic) is an Indo-European language with a documented history of some 3,000 years. Ancient Greek in its various forms was the language both of classical Greek civilisation and of the origins of Christianity, and...
Greek words, ανθρωπος, anthrōpos, meaning human, and μορφη, morphē, meaning shape or form. In Religion and Myths
Various This article is about a system of myths. For the 1942 book Mythology, see its author Edith Hamilton. A mythology is a relatively cohesive set of myths: stories that comprise a certain religion or belief system. What is mythology? Myths are generally stories based on tradition and legend designed to...
mythologies are almost entirely concerned with anthropomorphic gods in human forms and possessing human characteristics such as Definition Jealousy is an emotion experienced by one who perceives that another person is giving something that s/he wants (typically attention, love, or affection) to a third party. For example, a child will likely become jealous when her parent gives candy to a sibling but not to her. While...
jealousy, Look up Hate in Wiktionary, the free dictionary For other meanings, see Hate (disambiguation). Hate or hatred is an emotion of intense revulsion, distaste, enmity, or antipathy for a person, thing, or phenomenon; a desire to avoid, restrict, remove, or destroy its object. Hatred can be based on fear of...
hatred, or For the 1960s band, see Love (band). The term is also used in tennis. True Love Love has many meanings in English. It can mean an intense feeling of affection, an emotion or emotional state. In ordinary use, it usually refers to interpersonal love. Love is one of the most...
love. The Marked are the 12 gods of Olympus and the gods who reigned the world a time (Uranos, Cronus and Zeus). Chaos | +-------+--------------+------+ | | | Gaia Tartarus Eros | | +--------+----+-----+------------+ | | | | | | | Python | | +--+----+ +--+-+ | | | | | | | Uranus Pontus +-+------+ | | | | | | | | +-+-+ | +-+--+ Echidna Typhon | | | | | | | +-+-+ | | | / | | | / | ,------------------------|-- | / | | | / +------|------+-----+ | | | | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------. | | | +----------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+------------|------------+--------------------+------------------------------------------------------+---------------------+ | | | | | | | | | | (Titan) | (Cyclopes) | | (Hecantochires) |(Gigantes) | (Erinyes) | (Meliae) | | | | | | | | | +------+-+-----+--------+--------+--------+--------+-------+------+---------+--------+-------+ +--------+--------+ | +-------+------+ +----------+-----------+--------+-------+ +------+-+----------+ ... | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | Oceanus Crius Coeus Iapetus Phoebe Tethys Cronus Rhea Themis Mnemosyne Hyperion Theia Brontes Steropes Arges...
Greek gods such as Alternate meanings: See Zeus Web Server Statue of Zeus The Greek sculptor Phidias created the 12-m (40-ft) tall Statue of Zeus in about 435 bc. The statue stood in Olympia, and was perhaps the most famous sculpture in ancient Greece. Phidias made the god’s robe and...
Zeus and For other uses, see Apollo (disambiguation). Apollo (Greek: Απόλλων, Apóllōn) is a god in Greek and Roman mythology, the son of Zeus and Leto, and the twin of Artemis (goddess of the hunt). In later times he became in part confused...
Apollo often were depicted in anthropomorphic forms. Current religious belief generally holds that it is improper to describe the This article focuses on the monotheistic concept of a singular God. See deity or goddesses for details on divine entities in specific religions and mythologies. The term God designates a universal Supreme Being. There are countless variant definitions of God, however. For example: Many religious and philosophic systems consider God...
God of For a discussion of Jews as an ethnicity or ethnic group see the article on Jew. The Star of David, a common symbol of Jews and Judaism Judaism is the religion and culture of the Jewish people and one of the first recorded monotheistic faiths. It is also one of...
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam ( Arabic al-islām الإسلام, listen?) the submission to God is a monotheistic faith and the worlds second-largest religion. Etymology In Arabic, Islām means submission and is described as a Dīn, meaning way of life...
Islam as human. However, it is extremely difficult for the average person to picture or discuss God without an anthropomorphic framework. It is also noteworthy that the Judaeo-Christian Creation story ( This article is about Genesis, the first book of the Hebrew Bible. See Genesis (disambiguation) for other usages of the word. Genesis (Greek: Γένεσις, having the meanings of birth, creation, cause, beginning, source and origin; translated from Hebrew בראשׁית...
Book of Genesis) holds that God created man "in His image", implying if not an anthropomorphic God, then at least a deimorphic Man. Traditional Christianity also maintains that This article is about the figure known by both Jesus of Nazareth and Jesus Christ. For other usages, see Jesus (disambiguation). This 11th-century portrait is one of many images of Jesus in which a halo with a cross is used. Jesus of Nazareth (b. about 6–4 BC...
Jesus became human while remaining fully God, uniting the Divinity is seen as the existence of some entity or entities which are greater than humankind. There are many forms of divinity, based upon the religious beliefs of the person or persons viewing the divine. In Christianity the concept of divinity is held in the Holy Trinity of Father, Son...
divine and human natures in his person, and retaining his This article is about the religious meaning of the word Resurrection. For other meanings see Resurrection (disambiguation). Resurrection consists of the reuniting of the spirit and the body of an individual, or the raising of a person from death back to life. Deities, too, are reborn: see Life-death-rebirth...
resurrected body when he ascended to Heaven. According to The Salt Lake City temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the largest attraction in the citys Temple Square. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, widely known as the Mormon Church, or LDS Church, is by far the largest denomination within...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints ("LDS Church"; see also The term Mormon is a colloquial name, most-often used to refer to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). The name Mormon (also Mormonite) was first used in the 1830s for followers of Joseph Smith, Jr. who accepted The Book of Mormon as...
Mormon), God the Father has a glorified, perfected physical body in which His spirit dwells. However, in contrast to the human frailties (hate, lying, etc.) attributed to, for example, Greek gods, Monotheism (in Greek monon = single and Theos = God) is the belief in a single, universal, all-encompassing deity. Various forms of monotheism exist, including: Theism, a term that usually refers to the belief in a personal god, that is, a single god with a distinctive personality, rather than just a...
monotheist Gods are generally considered Omnibenevolence is the property of being perfectly good, attributed by some religions to God. The word omnibenevolence may be interpreted to mean perfectly just, all-loving, fully merciful, and so on, depending on precisely what is taken to be good. Categories: Religion stubs ...
omnibenevolent. The ten See Avatar (disambiguation) for other meanings. In Hinduism, an Avatar is defined as the incarnation (bodily manifestation) of an Immortal Being, or of the Ultimate Supreme Being. It derives from the Sanskrit word Avatara which means descent and usually implies a deliberate descent into mortal realms for special purposes. The...
avatars of the This article is about the Hindu religion; for other meanings of the word, see Hindu (disambiguation). Aum, the most sacred syllable and quintessential symbol of Hinduism, represents the first manifestation of the unmanifest Brahman. Hinduism (सनातन धर्म; commonly called Sanātana Dharma...
Hindu supreme God Vishnu (Hindi: (विष्णु) is a form of God, whom Hindus pray to. For Vaishnavites, He is the only Ultimate Reality or God. In Trimurti belief, He is the second aspect of God in the Trimurti (also called the Hindu Trinity), along with Brahma and...
Vishnu possessed human forms and qualities and retained the divine, although divinity varied in degrees; see See Avatar (disambiguation) for other meanings. In Hinduism, an Avatar is defined as the incarnation (bodily manifestation) of an Immortal Being, or of the Ultimate Supreme Being. It derives from the Sanskrit word Avatara which means descent and usually implies a deliberate descent into mortal realms for special purposes. The...
avatar for more detail. Vishnu, in Vaishnavism is the branch of Hinduism in which Vishnu or one of his avatars (i.e., incarnations) is worshipped as the supreme God and is a monotheistic faith. Branches Major Vaishnava schools of thought: Vishishtadvaita, espoused by Ramanuja Dvaita espoused by Shri Madhvacharya Achintya Bheda-Bheda, espoused by Shri Caitanya...
Vaishnavism, a monotheistic faith, unlike the gods of Greco-Roman religion, is Omniscience is the capacity to know everything, or at least everything that can be known. In monotheism, this ability is typically attributed to God. It is typically contrasted with omnipotence. Omniscience is sometimes understood to also imply the capacity to know everything that will be. Foreknowledge and its compatibility with...
omniscient and Omnibenevolence is the property of being perfectly good, attributed by some religions to God. The word omnibenevolence may be interpreted to mean perfectly just, all-loving, fully merciful, and so on, depending on precisely what is taken to be good. Categories: Religion stubs ...
omnibenevolent; see theological attributes on Vishnu (Hindi: (विष्णु) is a form of God, whom Hindus pray to. For Vaishnavites, He is the only Ultimate Reality or God. In Trimurti belief, He is the second aspect of God in the Trimurti (also called the Hindu Trinity), along with Brahma and...
Vishnu and in article on This article focuses on the monotheistic concept of a singular God. See deity or goddesses for details on divine entities in specific religions and mythologies. The term God designates a universal Supreme Being. There are countless variant definitions of God, however. For example: Many religious and philosophic systems consider God...
God. Anthropomorphism is also important in many traditions of Magic (also called magick to distinguish it from stage magic) is a supposed way of influencing the world through supernatural, mystical, or paranormal means. This article provides an overview of specific magical traditions and practices. It also discusses the use of magic as a plot device in various kinds of...
magic, where it is thought that entities can be affected by appealing to, bartering with or threatening their This page is about the core essence of a being. For the music genre, see soul music; for the chief city of South Korea see Seoul. The soul, in several philosophical movements and many religious traditions, is the core principle of life. Some traditions considered it immortal; others mortal. In...
spirits. Anthropomorphism in the form of personification consists of creating imaginary persons who are the embodiment of an abstraction such as From The Dance of Death by Hans Holbein Death, personified is an anthropomorphic figure or a fictional character who has existed in mythology and popular culture since the earliest days of storytelling. Because the reality of death has had a substantial influence on the human psyche and the development of...
Death, Lust, or War (see The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse are mentioned in the Bible in chapter six of the Book of Revelation, which predicts that they will ride during the Apocalypse. The four horsemen are traditionally named War, Famine, Pestilence, and Death. However, the Bible actually only names one: Death. Woodcut by Albrecht...
Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse for notable examples).
In Rhetoric In classical Rhetoric (from Greek ρητωρ, rhêtôr, orator) is one of the three original liberal arts or trivium (the other members are dialectic and grammar). While it has meant many different things during its 2500-year history, it is generally described today as the art of...
rhetoric, personification is a A figure of speech, sometimes termed a rhetorical figure or device, or elocution, is a word or phrase that departs from straightforward, literal language. Figures of speech are often used and crafted for emphasis, freshness of expression, or clarity. However, clarity may also suffer from their use. Note that not...
figure of speech (more specifically a Another meaning of Trope is Jewish cantillation. Linguistic usage A trope is a play on words, a word used in something other than what is considered its literal or normal form. It comes from the Greek word, tropos, which means a turn, as in heliotrope, a flower which turns toward...
trope) that employs the deliberate use of anthropomorphism, often to make an emotional appeal. In rhetorical theory, a distinction is often drawn between personification (anthropomorphism of inanimate, but real, objects) and other figures, such as The word apostrophe can refer to several things: A form of punctuation, see Apostrophe (mark). A style of speech, see Apostrophe (rhetoric). An album by Frank Zappa, see Apostrophe (album). A French television show about literature, hosted by Bernard Pivot, see Apostrophe (television). This is a disambiguation page — a...
apostrophe, a figure in which an absent people or abstract concepts are addressed. An examples of rhetorical personification: - A tree whose hungry mouth is prest
- Against the earth's sweet-flowing breast. Joyce Kilmer (December 6, 1886 – July 30, 1918) was an American poet; his best-known work is Trees. The poem is notable for its anthropomorphism: the tree in the poem presses its mouth to the earths breast and looks at God and raises its leafy arms to pray...
Joyce Kilmer, Trees
An example of rhetorical apostrophe: - O eloquent, just, and mighty Death! Alternatively, Professor Walter Raleigh was a scholar and author circa 1900. Sir Walter Raleigh (1554 - October 29, 1618) is famed as a writer, poet, spy, and explorer. Note: Many alternate spellings of his surname exist, including Rawley, Ralegh, and Rawleigh; although Raleigh appears most commonly today, he himself used that...
Sir Walter Raleigh, History of the World
Download high resolution version (785x916, 124 KB)Peter Rabbit + Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - Beatrix Potter characters - Project Gutenberg eText 14220 - http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/2/2/14220/14220-h/14220-h.htm - This image has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright...
Download high resolution version (785x916, 124 KB)Peter Rabbit + Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - Beatrix Potter characters - Project Gutenberg eText 14220 - http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/2/2/14220/14220-h/14220-h.htm - This image has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright...
 Peter Rabbit and wife being importuned by Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny - anthropomorphic characters from Potters illustration of her anthropomorphic rabbits - in this case the married cousins, Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny, from The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies Beatrix Potter, or Helen Beatrix Potter (July 28, 1866 - December 22, 1943) was a British childrens book author and illustrator. Her most famous character is...
Beatrix Potter books In Literature Anthropomorphism is a well established device in literature, notably in books for children, such as those by Potters illustration of her anthropomorphic rabbits - in this case the married cousins, Benjamin and Flopsy Bunny, from The Tale of the Flopsy Bunnies Beatrix Potter, or Helen Beatrix Potter (July 28, 1866 - December 22, 1943) was a British childrens book author and illustrator. Her most famous character is...
Beatrix Potter and Photograph of Lewis Carroll taken by himself, with assistance Charles Lutwidge Dodgson (January 27, 1832 – January 14, 1898), better known by the pen name Lewis Carroll, was a British author, mathematician, Anglican clergyman, logician, and amateur photographer. His most famous writings are Alices Adventures in Wonderland and its...
Lewis Carroll, involving characters such as Categories: Fictional rabbits | Series of books | Stub ...
Peter Rabbit and the For the fictional cat, see: Cheshire cat Cheshire Cat is a pop-punk album by Blink-182 that was released in 1995 (see 1995 in music). Track listing Carousel M+Ms Fentoozler Touchdown Boy Strings Peggy Sue Sometimes Does My Breath Smell? Cacophony T.V. Toast & Bananas Wasting...
Cheshire Cat, respectively. Terence David John Pratchett OBE (known to some fans as Pterry) is an English fantasy author (born April 28, 1948, in Beaconsfield, Bucks), best known for his Discworld series. British author Terry Pratchett is noted for his satirical style, for example Susan hated Literature. Shed much prefer to read...
Terry Pratchett is notable for having several anthropomorphic personifications in his The Discworld is a series of over 30 novels by Terry Pratchett set on the Discworld. Since the first novel of the series, 1983s The Colour of Magic, the series has gone from strength to strength, spawning many related works including music inspired by the series as well as...
Discworld books, perhaps most well known is the character Death is a fictional character in Terry Pratchetts Discworld series. Discworlds Death is a parody of several other personifications of death, such as the Grim Reaper. Like most of them he is a black robed skeleton carrying a scythe. Unlike many of them he has a personality beyond...
Death. Piers Anthony Dillingham Jacob (born August 6, 1934 in Oxford, England) is a writer in the science fiction and fantasy genres, publishing under the name Piers Anthony. He has written many novels and short stories, but he is most famous for his book series, and particularly for the long-running...
Piers Anthony also wrote a series regarding the seven This article needs cleanup. Please edit this article to conform to a higher standard of article quality. Incarnations of Immortality is the name of a seven-book fantasy series penned by author Piers Anthony. The books are each focused upon one of seven supernatural offices (Death, Time, Fate, War, Nature...
incarnations of Death, Nature, Time, War, Fate, Good and Evil. Neil Richard Gaiman (born November 10, 1960 in Portchester, England) is the author of numerous science fiction and fantasy works, including many comic books. As of 2005, he lives near Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Biography After being rejected many times by publishers, Gaiman pursued journalism as a means to learn about...
Neil Gaiman is also notable for anthropomorphising seven aspects of the world in his series Cover of The Sandman #1, by Dave McKean. The Sandman was a comic book series, written by Neil Gaiman and published by DC Comics from 1988 until 1996, becoming the flagship of DCs Vertigo imprint, and kept in print as a series of ten graphic novels. It is widely...
The Sandman - they are called Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. The pages linked below discuss events which occur in The Sandman, and give away plot points that could spoil your enjoyment of the series if you have not yet read it. The Endless Destiny Death Dream (See also Daniel) Destruction Desire Despair Delirium...
the Endless: Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. Destiny is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. He is the eldest of the Endless, and is portrayed as a tall figure, obscured within a brown robe and cowl. He reads what is to...
Destiny, Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. Death as illustrated by Chris Bachalo. in Death: The High Cost of Living #1. Death is a fictional character from the DC comic book series, The Sandman (1988 - 1996). She was created by Sandman scribe Neil Gaiman and given visual life by illustrator...
Death, Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. Dream is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. He is the personification of dreams and storytelling. He is given many names in the series, including Morpheus and Oneiros (within Wikipedia he is generally referred...
Dream, Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow. Destruction is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series The Sandman. He is the fourth eldest of the Endless, and is depicted as a big, red-haired, bearded man. He wears colourful clothes with no particular theme...
Destruction, Desire is one of the Endless, a fictional character from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. It is the third youngest of the Endless. Desire is a beautiful, perfectly androgynous figure who is not so much genderless as multiple-gendered. Desire blends in effortlessly with whatever environment it...
Desire, Despair is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series, The Sandman. Despair is the twin sister of Desire. She is squat, flabby and pale-skinned, with black hair. She does not wear clothes. On a finger of her left hand she wears a ring...
Despair, and Delirium amid fish, from Season of Mists, 1990-1 Delirium is one of the Endless, fictional characters from Neil Gaimans comic book series The Sandman. Delirium, known to some cultures within the mythos as Mania, is the youngest of the Endless. She is usually quite short, and thin. Her...
Delirium. The Indian books The Panchatantra is a Sanskrit classic, written by Vishnu Sarma around 200 BC. It is an anthropomorphic illustration of the five most important priniciples of Raja neeti (political science) through animals. The five principles illustrated are: Mitra Bhedha (The Loss of Friends) Mitra Laabha (Gaining Friends) Suhrudbheda (Causing Dissension Between...
Panchatantra (The Five priniciples) and The Jataka tales employ this trick of anthromorphized animals very effectively to illustrate various principles of life. Mrs. Grundy is the personification of conventional propriety (from Mortons play Speed the Plough, which appeared in 1798). (In modern British usage, she is Mrs Grundy; by contemporary rules of punctuation of 1798, still prevailing in North America today, she is Mrs. Grundy.) Categories: Stub ...
Mrs. Grundy is a personification of conventional propriety.
Common usage It is a common tendency for people to think of inanimate objects as having human-like characteristics as well, though few if any actually believe this to have real significance. Common examples include naming one's car or begging a machine to work. Advances in This article is about intelligence exhibited by manufactured systems, typically computers. For other uses of the term AI, see Ai. For the influential Warp Records series, see Artificial Intelligence (series). Artificial intelligence, also known as machine intelligence, is defined as intelligence exhibited by anything manufactured (i.e. artificial) by humans...
artificial intelligence are beginning to make such foibles into a potentially more significant phenomenon, however, as The tower of a personal computer. A computer is a device or machine for making calculations or controlling operations that are expressible in numerical or logical terms. Computers are constructed from components that perform simple well-defined functions. The complex interactions of these components endow computers with the ability to...
computers begin to reach the point where they can recognize spoken language. Some computers are already very good at displaying very specific and specialized categories of human-like behaviour, such as learning from their mistakes or to anticipate certain input, playing For other meanings, see Chess (disambiguation). From left, a white king, black rook and queen, white pawn, black knight, and white bishop. Chess (from the Persian word Shah) is a board game and mental sport for two players. It is played on a square board of 8 rows (called ranks...
chess and other games with humanlike capability, and even in the case of In practical usage, a robot is a mechanical device which performs automated tasks, either according to direct human supervision, a pre-defined program or, a set of general guidelines, using artificial intelligence techniques. These tasks either replace or enhance human work, such as in manufacturing, construction or manipulation of heavy...
robots potentially taking on humanlike form.
Modern occurrences Charlene and Robbie in Dinosaurs episode Refrigerator Day, first aired December 11, 1991, screen capture from http://www.geocities.com/muppetchristmas/dinosaurs.html, deemed fair use This work is copyrighted. The individual who uploaded this work and first used it in an article, and subsequent persons who place it into...
Charlene and Robbie in Dinosaurs episode Refrigerator Day, first aired December 11, 1991, screen capture from http://www.geocities.com/muppetchristmas/dinosaurs.html, deemed fair use This work is copyrighted. The individual who uploaded this work and first used it in an article, and subsequent persons who place it into...
 Characters from the sitcom Dinosaurs should not be mistaken for a Japanese anime series called Dinozaurs. Charlene and Robbie in the episode Refrigerator Day Dinosaurs was an American television sitcom on ABC, about a family of talking dinosaurs that ran for 65 episodes from April 1991 to July 1994. The show featured animatronic dinosaurs...
Dinosaurs The use of anthropomorphized animals has a long tradition in art and literature. Frequently they are used to portray stereotypical characters, in order to quickly convey what characteristics the author or artist intends for them to possess. Examples include Aesop, or Æsop (from the Greek Aisopos), famous for his Fables, is supposed to have lived from about 620 to 560 B.C. Aesops Fables are still taught as moral lessons and used as subjects for various entertainments especially childrens plays and cartoons. The place of his birth...
Aesop's fables, George Orwell George Orwell was the pen name of British author Eric Arthur Blair (25 June 1903–21 January 1950). Noted as a political and cultural commentator, Orwell is among the most widely admired English-language essayists of the twentieth century, though he is best known for two novels...
George Orwell's Animal Farm book cover Animal Farm is a satirical novel by George Orwell, ostensibly about a group of animals who oust the humans from the farm they live on and endeavour to run it themselves, only to have it corrupted into a brutal tyranny on its own. It was written...
Animal Farm and political cartoons, e.g. Cover Maus: A Survivors Tale is a graphic novel by Art Spiegelman which recounts his fathers struggle to survive the Holocaust as a Polish Jew, while also following the authors troubled relationship with his father, and the way the effects of war reverberate through generations of a...
Maus. Many of the most famous children's television characters are anthropomorphized Funny animal is a slang term used to describe a genre of cartoons and comics in which the main characters are anthropomorphic animals. It usually refers to humour-oriented cartoons or comics, but not necessarily always. Walt Disneys characters Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, and Goofy are considered to be...
funny animals: Mickey Mouse is a fictional character, a comic animal cartoon character who is perhaps Walt Disneys most famous creation. Fancifully estimated as standing 2 ft 3 in (69 cm) and weighing 23 pounds (10 kg), the mouse rapidly rose to the pinnacle of American culture, being more widely recognized...
Mickey Mouse, Kermit and Grover make regular appearances on Sesame Street along with many other Muppets. Kermit has a TV star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame located at 6801 Hollywood Blvd. Kermit singing Its Not Easy Bein Green Kermit the Frog is a Muppet character and one of puppeteer Jim...
Kermit the Frog, Bugs has appeared in numerous cartoons including the Looney Tunes series. Bugs Bunny is a fictional street-smart gray rabbit appearing in the Looney Tunes series of cartoons, and is one of the most recognizable characters, real or imaginary, in the world. According to his bio, he was born in...
Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck is an animated cartoon character in the Warner Bros. Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies series of cartoons. Daffy was the first of the new breed of screwball characters that emerged in the 1930s and supplanted traditional everyman characters in popularity in the 1940s. Daffy is also one of...
Daffy Duck and Calimero is a charming, but hapless Italian anthropomorphized cartoon chicken, the only black one in a family of yellow chickens. He wears half of his egg shell still on his head. Quote: Its unfair, they are big and I am small. Quote: Its an injustice - aw poor little...
Calimero, for example. While 'funny' is common, it is not a hard rule; Bert the Turtle, star of Duck and Cover is a children-oriented exception. While cartoons have often featured these characters, a newer sitcom-style show with this theme is Father of the Pride is an NBC television show that began broadcasting on August 31, 2004 and was only the second computer-generated TV series in prime-time network television (after UPNs Game Over). The show, which is produced by Jeffrey Katzenberg and his company, DreamWorks SKG revolves around...
Father of the Pride. In recent years interest in anthropomorphic animals has also spawned a genre of examples, commonly referred to as " Robin Hood and Maid Marian as foxes from the Walt Disney Robin Hood, a major example of the predominant character design style of Furry art Furry is a colloquial term used to indicate a particular category of fictional anthropomorphic animals. Put simply, a furry is a funny animal taken seriously...
furries" or "morphs" for short. In turn, the word has also come to include bestowing on humans certain animalistic attributes, or even the attributes of inanimate objects. These attributes can include everything from physical shape or movements, "She moves like a lynx", "He looks like a bear", to mentalities. "He is savage as a lion", "She has the heart of a lamb." Subcultures, such as Therianthropy is a generic term for any transformation of a human into an animal form, either as a part of mythology or as a spiritual concept. The word is derived from Greek theros, meaning wild animal, and anthrōpos, meaning man. Scholarly use of the term In folklore, mythology...
Therianthropy, Robin Hood and Maid Marian as foxes from the Walt Disney Robin Hood, a major example of the predominant character design style of Furry art Furry is a colloquial term used to indicate a particular category of fictional anthropomorphic animals. Put simply, a furry is a funny animal taken seriously...
Furry or Otherkin, have formed with this primary characteristic in mind. These subcultures thrive over the internet and are easy enough to find that they have even received media attention.
In logical reasoning Using anthropomorphized caricatures or projecting human qualities on conceptual entities or inanimate objects in Reasoning is the act of using reason to derive a conclusion from certain premises. There are two main methods to reach a conclusion. One is deductive, in which given true premises, the conclusion must follow (the conclusion cannot be false). This sort of reasoning is non-ampliative - it does not...
reasoning is also known as committing a The pathetic fallacy is the logical fallacy of treating inanimate objects or conceptual entities such as countries as if they have thoughts or feelings. (Compare to reification.) For example: Rwanda wants to punish the Congo! Ah, it is no good. That car just refuses to start! the moving object, due...
pathetic fallacy.
See also - Anthropopathy (Greek ανθρωπος, anthropos, human, παθος, pathos, suffering) is the attribution of human emotion to a non-human being, generally a god. The term anthropomorphism refers to non-humans taking human shape, rather than emotion. This term may encompass...
Anthropopathy
- A figure of speech, sometimes termed a rhetorical figure or device, or elocution, is a word or phrase that departs from straightforward, literal language. Figures of speech are often used and crafted for emphasis, freshness of expression, or clarity. However, clarity may also suffer from their use. Note that not...
Figure of speech
- Rhetoric (from Greek ρητωρ, rhêtôr, orator) is one of the three original liberal arts or trivium (the other members are dialectic and grammar). While it has meant many different things during its 2500-year history, it is generally described today as the art of...
Rhetoric
- The Uncanny Valley is a principle of robotics concerning the emotional response of humans to robots and other non-human entities. It was theorized by Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in the late 1970s through psychological experiments in which he measured human response to robots of varying degrees of anthropomorphism. This...
Uncanny Valley
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