pup·pet /ˈpʌpət/
  傀儡,木偶
  Pup·pet n.  [Written also poppet.]
  1. A small image in the human form; a doll.
  2. A similar figure moved by the hand or by a wire in a mock drama; a marionette; a wooden actor in a play.
  At the pipes of some carved organ move,
  The gilded puppets dance.   --Pope.
  3. One controlled in his action by the will of another; a tool; -- so used in contempt.
  4. Mach. The upright support for the bearing of the spindle in a lathe.
  Puppet master. Same as Puppetman.
  Puppet play, a puppet show.
  Puppet player, one who manages the motions of puppets.
  Puppet show, a mock drama performed by puppets moved by wires.
  Puppet valve, a valve in the form of a circular disk, which covers a hole in its seat, and opens by moving bodily away from the seat while remaining parallel with it, -- used in steam engines, pumps, safety valves, etc.  Its edge is often beveled, and fits in a conical recess in the seat when the valve is closed. See the valves shown in Illusts. of Plunger pump, and Safety valve, under Plunger, and Safety.
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  puppet
       n 1: a small figure of a person operated from above with strings
            by a puppeteer [syn: marionette]
       2: a person who is controlled by others and is used to perform
          unpleasant or dishonest tasks for someone else [syn: creature,
           tool]
       3: a doll with a hollow head of a person or animal and a cloth
          body; intended to fit over the hand and be manipulated
          with the fingers