Talk:Frankenstein's monster

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The following information passed a request for deletion.

This discussion is no longer live and is left here as an archive. Please do not modify this conversation, but feel free to discuss its conclusions.


Too bad AutoFormat doesn't auto-tag things like this with rfd. --Connel MacKenzie 23:27, 29 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Hmmm. I just saw an attributive use of this in the last week or two, in the sense of a man-made creation gone awry. I'll see if I can figure out where. --EncycloPetey 00:12, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And how would AF know? The format is fine ;-) Robert Ullmann 13:32, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Strong keep because:
Harold Joseph Laski, Reflections on the Revolution of Our Time (1968) p. 109:
  • They created a Frankenstein's monster which they did not imagine could grow out of their control.
Roger Horrocks, Jo Campling, Male Myths and Icons: Masculinity in Popular Culture (1995) p. 141:
  • He is like a Frankenstein's monster in reverse: everything that is pretty is combined together to produce a perfect androgyne.
Euan George Nisbet, Living Earth: A Short History of Life and Its Home (1991) p. 84:
  • Like the English language, the eukaryote cell is a chimera, a Frankenstein's monster, assembled from bits and pieces of genetic information...
Norman R. Augustine, Augustine's Laws (1977) p. 68:
  • Somehow, the law does not always seem to serve those who created it, becoming at times a Frankenstein's monster of sorts.
bd2412 T 14:57, 30 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Struck. Attributive citations added to the entry. --EncycloPetey 07:16, 1 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]