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2006-10-07 06:26:49 · 16 answers · asked by tracijoe5 1 in Education & Reference Trivia

16 answers

Ahhh... I think this is a trick question. I have to answer: his name was Baron Frankenstein.

It was he himself then, because as creator he (Frankenstein) was responsible for it's existance and subsequently for what it did.
The Frankensteins monster was Frankenstein

2006-10-07 06:39:58 · answer #1 · answered by Komika 2 · 0 4

The Creature is not named beyond being Frankensteins Monster, most subsequent tellings or borrowing of the creature call the monster Frankenstein.

Igor was the lab assistant.

2006-10-07 07:40:58 · answer #2 · answered by janssen411 6 · 1 0

Frankenstines Monster

2016-12-12 08:51:12 · answer #3 · answered by naranjo 4 · 0 0

The monster's name is often said to be Frankenstein which is false. That name belongs to the professor that made him. He atually never granted his creation a name.
I saw somebody say Igor... also false. Igor, in most versions hunchbacked, is the assistant of professor Frankenstein.

2006-10-07 06:58:01 · answer #4 · answered by twinsisterwendy 6 · 4 0

He is not named in most movies I have seen, however he is named Victor in Mary Shelly's Frankenstein movie with Sting as the Doctor.

2006-10-07 06:31:38 · answer #5 · answered by Kathya L 1 · 0 2

Come on people, stop basing answers off of movies and stick to the original 1818 novel.

In popular culture, the creature is often referred to as "Frankenstein" after his creator Victor Frankenstein, but in the novel the creature has no name. When speaking to Victor, he calls himself the "Adam of your labors"; whereas Victor refers to him as "creature", "fiend", "spectre", "the demon", "wretch", "devil", "thing", "being" and "ogre". [1]

As in Mary Shelley's story, the monster's namelessness became a central part of the stage adaptations in London and Paris during the decades after the novel's first appearance. Shelley herself attended a performance of Presumption, the first successful stage adaptation of her novel. "The play bill amused me extremely, for in the list of dramatis personae came _________, by Mr T. Cooke,” she wrote to her friend Leigh Hunt. "This nameless mode of naming the unnameable is rather good."

2014-07-23 17:57:55 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

The monster exchange into on no account given a popularity, that's in basic terms refered to in the e book because of the fact the"creature," "fiend," "the dæmon," "wretch," "zombie," "devil," "being," and "ogre". The call exchange into deliberately left off by utilising author Mary Shelly as a logo of his parentlessness and absence of human experience and self identification.

2016-12-16 03:50:08 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No.

"The creature – 'my hideous progeny' – was not given a name by Mary Shelley, and is only referred to by words such as 'monster', 'creature', 'daemon', 'fiend', and 'wretch'."

2006-10-07 06:29:12 · answer #8 · answered by yoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyoyo 3 · 0 0

I thought it was Adam, but maybe I'm just confused. Oddly enough he could speak in the book but not in the movie, go figure.

2006-10-07 06:54:29 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

His friends called him Fred.

2006-10-07 13:20:50 · answer #10 · answered by pat z 7 · 0 2

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