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Walter Mitty Story Heroic April Noun Wawl Ter Mit Ee Original

A Walter Mitty is someone who escapes mundane reality through daydreaming, often imagining themselves as heroic.

A Walter Mitty is a commonplace, unadventurous person who escapes reality through daydreaming, often imagining themselves in dramatic or heroic situations.

Word Walter Mitty
Date April 15, 2014
Type noun
Syllables WAWL-ter-MIT-ee
Etymology The original Walter Mitty was created by humorist James Thurber in his famous story "The Secret Life of Walter Mitty." In Walter's real life, he is a reticent, henpecked proofreader befuddled by everyday life. But in his fantasies, Walter imagines himself as various daring and heroic characters. Thurber's popular story was first published in The New Yorker in 1939. "Walter Mitty" has since become the eponym for dreamers who imagine themselves in dramatic or heroic situations.
Examples Alan is a Walter Mitty who loves to read travel books but rarely ventures beyond the limits of his own small town.

"Ralphie eventually has to resort to his own Walter Mitty-esque flights of fancy to deal with his real-life predicament." - From an article by Bill Eggert in The Tribune-Democrat (Johnstown, Pennsylvania), December 14, 2013
Definition : a commonplace unadventurous person who seeks escape from reality through daydreaming

Tags: wordoftheday::noun

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