| anthropomorphism |
Assigning human qualities and traits to non-human animals. Because most of us were nurtured on programs like Walt Disney, many of us grew up believing that wild animals have human thoughts, feelings, and emotions. In reality, they don't. To say that: "My Purple Martins feel sad when it's time to migrate back to Brazil" is to speak anthropomorphically. Still, many martin landlords enjoy their martins primarily because they perceive the natural world in an anthropomorphic way.
Ãâó: www.purplemartin.org/main/Terminology.html
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| anthropomorphism |
Ascribing human characteristics to other animals or inanimate objects.
Ãâó: nationalzoo.si.edu/Animals/Primates/glossary.cfm
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| anthropomorphism |
giving human-like characteristics to animals An anthropomorphism is saying that a rabbit cried tears of sadness.
Ãâó: www.inhs.uiuc.edu/chf/pub/virtualbird/glossary.htm...
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| anthropomorphism |
Attributing human qualities or form, to animals or things. Creating a god in man's image.
Ãâó: www.reasoned.org/glossary.htm
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| anthropomorphism |
the giving of human attributes to abstract conceptions, especially in reference to divinity; eg, the imaging of a god in the familiar shape of a human being in visual arts, in the mind, etc.
Ãâó: staff.jccc.net/thoare/glossary.htm
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