Humanoid
Entity with human form or characteristics / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A humanoid (/ˈhjuːmənɔɪd/; from English human and -oid "resembling") is a non-human entity with human form or characteristics. By the 20th century, the term came to describe fossils which were morphologically similar, but not identical, to those of the human skeleton.[1]
Although this usage was common in the sciences for much of the 20th century, it is now considered rare.[1] More generally, the term can refer to anything with distinctly human characteristics or adaptations, such as possessing opposable anterior forelimb-appendages (i.e. thumbs), visible spectrum-binocular vision (i.e. having two eyes), or biomechanic plantigrade-bipedalism (i.e. the ability to walk on heels and metatarsals in an upright position). Humanoids may also include human-animal hybrids (where each cell has partly human and partly animal genetic contents) and human-animal chimeras (where some cells are human and some cells are animal in origin).[2] Science fiction media frequently present sentient extraterrestrial lifeforms as humanoid as a byproduct of convergent evolution.
Humanoid characters are defined by their human-like physical characteristics and forms, which can vary. Humanoid characters can appear entirely human (or predominantly human-like) (e.g., Kryptonians, the emotions in Inside Out, various of races from The Legend of Zelda), or they can possess general non-human traits but have physical characteristics that are human-like (e.g., human-like Pokémon, ThunderCats characters, various of characters from The Amazing World of Gumball). For the latter, this can usually overlap with or even be considered a subset for anthropomorphic characters.