anthro
See also: anthro-
English
Etymology
Shortening.
Noun
anthro (countable and uncountable, plural anthros)
- (informal, uncountable) Anthropology.
- (informal, countable) An anthropologist.
- 1969, Vine Deloria, Jr., Custer Died for your Sins:
- Workshop anthros often ask Indians of tender age to give their authoritative answers to problems which an entire generation of Indians is just now beginning to solve.
- 1994, Julian Rice, “A ventriloquy of anthros”, in American Indian Quarterly, page 176:
- While Deloria may have hoped to move anthropologists to be more appreciative, Erdoes simply sets scholars up as straw men for the average non-Indian academic reader to self-servingly scorn. Anthros are responsible for believing reservation Indians are “warriors without weapons” (1972:36-37)
- (informal, countable) An anthropomorphic character.
- 2012, Lindsay Cibos, Jared Hodges, Draw More Furries: How to Create Anthropomorphic Fantasy Creatures:
- Extra animals add complexity, but the benefit is that you're more likely to create a unique new character. There's hundreds of wolf anthros, but how many zebra-striped pig-tigers are there?
Translations
An anthropomorphic character.
|
Adjective
anthro (not comparable)
- (informal) anthropomorphic
- 2004, Brad Guigar, The everything cartooning book, page 146:
- They are to anthro cartoonists what Trekkies are to Star Trek, gathering for special conventions that feature anthro cartoons and cartoonists.
Translations
Anthropomorphic.
|
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.