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anthropomorphism
[an-thruh-puh-mawr-fiz-uhm]
anthropomorphism
/ ˌænθrəpəˈmɔːfɪzəm /
noun
the attribution of human form or behaviour to a deity, animal, etc
anthropomorphism
The attributing of human characteristics and purposes to inanimate objects, animals, plants, or other natural phenomena, or to God. To describe a rushing river as “angry” is to anthropomorphize it.
Other Word Forms
- anthropomorphist noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of anthropomorphism1
Example Sentences
But by the 1980s, much chimp behavior was being interpreted in ways that would have been labeled anthropomorphism — ascribing human traits to non-human entities — decades earlier.
Yet anthropomorphism was increasingly seen as a form of bias that did not align with the scientific method emerging in the 19th century.
I'm not a fan of using the anthropomorphism card.
My notion of anthropomorphism kept changing as I spent time with him.
The fine catalog to “Through Vincent’s Eyes” points to the anthropomorphism of those undulating trees, which seem to dance furiously in the vivid light of a bright blue sky, just outside the hospital’s confines.
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