Noun
sheeple pl (plural only)
- (derogatory, slang) People who unquestioningly accept as true whatever their political leaders say or who adopt popular opinion as their own without scrutiny.
2009 August 27, Aaron Wherry, “The Commons: You bore us, Mr. Ignatieff”, in Macleans, Canada, retrieved 21 August 2014:[F]ormer MP Garth Turner’s new book . . . is entitled Sheeple, a term apparently applied to people who often take on the characteristics—curly white hair covering most of the body, fondness for grazing, tendency to do as told—of sheep.
- Kaitlyn S. C. Hatch, Wise at Any Age (page 10)
- Being a sheeple isn't always dangerous. A lot of the time it can just make a person look foolish, more than anything.
2011, Carol Ann Lindsay, The Planet of Comet Sense, page 55:I think it's the HYDRA, the group of whatevers that rule the world, those elitists that laugh at us, joke about their environmentalist sheeples doing their bidding while they sip the best wine on the planet, ride around in private jets, […]
Translations
the sheeple, one of the sheeple
- Bulgarian: стадо (bg) n (stado) (derogatory, slang)
- Czech: ovčan (cs) m, ovčani pl, ovce (cs) f
- Dutch: kudde (nl)
- Esperanto: ŝafhomo
- Finnish: vaalikarja (fi)
- French: mouton de Panurge (fr) m
- German: Fähnchen im Wind n, Herdenmensch (de) m, Jasager (de) m, Mitläufer (de) m, Schaf (de) n, Schlafschaf n, Untertan (de) m, Wellenreiter m
- Greek: πρόβατα (el) n pl (próvata)
- Hungarian: birka (hu)
- Latin: pecus n
- Polish: leming (pl) m
- Portuguese: manada (pt) f, gado (pt) m
- Russian: о́вощ (ru) m (óvošč), чел-ове́к m (čel-ovék), бы́дло (ru) n (býdlo) (derogatory, slang)
- Spanish: borregada (es) f (colloquial)
- Turkish: uymacı (tr), uymacılar pl, koyunlukçı, koyunlukçılar pl
- Volapük: (one of the, ♂♀) jepamen, (♂♀) jepamens pl, (collective ♂♀) jepamenem
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