Poppet

In folk magic and witchcraft, a poppet (also known as poppit, moppet, mommet and pippy) is a doll made to represent a person, for casting spells on that person or to aid that person through magic.[1] They are occasionally found lodged in chimneys. These dolls may be fashioned from such materials as a carved root, grain or corn shafts, a fruit, paper, wax, a potato, clay, branches, or cloth stuffed with herbs with the intent that any actions performed upon the effigy will be transferred to the subject based on sympathetic magic.[1][2] Poppets are also used as kitchen witch figures.

Poppets

Etymology

The word poppet is an older spelling of puppet, from Middle English popet, meaning a small child or a doll. In British English it continues to hold this meaning. Poppet is also a chiefly British term of endearment or diminutive referring to a young woman or girl amongst urban populaces,[3] much like the words "dear" or "sweetie."

gollark: Well, think about it - some users find it too hard to just `pastebin run whateverthepastebinis`.
gollark: Er, not infected, *conveniently copied itself to*, sorry.
gollark: I mean, do you really want to accept the privacy policy on all the networked devices it just infected?
gollark: Trouble with this "actually asking the user" stuff is that it would make EZCopy and EZInstall harder to use.
gollark: It's important that potatOS retain support for hacking the user's brain.

See also

References

  1. Scott Cunningham (2000). Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs. Llewellyn Worldwide. p. 13. ISBN 0875421229.
  2. Stephen Fry (presenter), John Lloyd (creator), Ian Lorimer (director). "Divination". QI. Season D. Episode 10. BBC.
  3. Random House Unabridged Dictionary, Random House, Inc. 2006. 17 Nov. 2006.
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