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: a person, animal, or object adopted by a group as a symbolic figure especially to bring them good luck
the team had a mountain lion as their mascot
Synonyms
Examples of mascot in a Sentence
The team had a mountain lion as their mascot.
she wears a mascot made of ebony and silver on a chain around her neck
Recent Examples on the Web
The Hershey Bears are getting quite a bit of mascot support!
—Gabrielle Rockson, People.com, 8 Jan. 2025
In an off-the-wall style only college football can present, Flavor Flav was revealed from under the Tubby mascot costume and helped dump the condiment on the Gophers’ head coach.
—Andy Greder, Twin Cities, 4 Jan. 2025
In this excerpt, Keri regales us with the tale of an epic 22-inning game, replete with a misbehaving mascot.
—Max Ufberg, hazlitt.net, 4 Jan. 2025
The Student Academy Awards gold medal winner is about a meteor crash and a sushi restaurant mascot dressed as a fish who frantically rushes to a clock tower before the end of the world.
—Bill Desowitz, IndieWire, 3 Jan. 2025
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Word History
Etymology
French mascotte, from Occitan mascoto, from masco witch, from Medieval Latin masca
First Known Use
1881, in the meaning defined above
Articles Related to mascot
Dictionary Entries Near mascot
Cite this Entry
“Mascot.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/mascot. Accessed 20 Jan. 2025.
Kids Definition
mascot
noun
mas·cot
ˈmas-ˌkät
also -kət
: a person, animal, or object supposed to bring good luck
Etymology
from French mascotte "mascot," from a Romance word mascoto "charm," literally "little witch," from masco "witch," from Latin masca "witch"
Word Origin
The word mascot is an example of words that come to have a more pleasant meaning as they develop through the years and through many languages. The ancestor of mascot is the Latin word masca, used in the Middle Ages to mean "witch." Masca passed into the Romance speech of southern France as masco. Later it developed a derivative mascoto, literally meaning "little witch" but actually used to mean "charm" or "magic spell." A magic spell can be used for good as well as bad. Already, then, we have the beginnings of a change to a nicer idea in the basic use of the word. The word mascoto came to be mascotte in modern French, meaning a "good luck charm." It was made popular by the operetta La Mascotte in 1880. In this operetta "la mascotte" is the lovely young woman Bettina, whose influence brings victories to the army of the prince of Pisa. English later borrowed the word as mascot, with the meaning "a person or thing thought to bring good luck." Today the word is often used to refer to an animal chosen by a school or college as a good luck symbol for its sports teams.
More from Merriam-Webster on mascot
Nglish: Translation of mascot for Spanish Speakers
Britannica English: Translation of mascot for Arabic Speakers
Britannica.com: Encyclopedia article about mascot
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