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Should the word "Muppet" be in the dictionary?

D'Snowth

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My vote: Yes

This is practically a household name, and some Muppet merchandise includes the word "Muppet" in a dictionary style defenition. Besides, Muppets and Jim Henson are in the encyclopedia, so why can't Muppet be in the dictionary?
 

beforemyway

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are you serious??? lol, that's great! yea, it should be in the dictionary :stick_out_tongue:

what would it's dictionary deffinition be though?
 

D'Snowth

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beforemyway said:
what would it's dictionary deffinition be though?
The one I hear quite frequently goes something like this:
"a combination of marionettes, and foam-rubber hand puppets."

or

"Special puppets built for television by Jim Henson."
 

Vic Romano

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I went to www.dictionary.com but they didn't have "Muppet" listed. So they offered me "Mopet" instead:
mop·pet
n.
A young child.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[From obsolete mop, fool, child, from Middle English moppe.] :confused:
 

Dantecat

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Bobhopesite,Why Is That Word "Muppet" In Your 1978 Dictionary? Huh :confused:

:eek: :zany:
 

Whatever

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I think the Muppets deserve to be in the dictionary! That'd rock! But since they all belong to different companies, it's hard to define them.
 

sarah_yzma

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Muppet: an item that moves from one owner to another, never finding a true home...

that's MY definition!
 
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