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  1. Dumbo (1941) predates the use of "dumbo" to mean a stupid person (1951). Dumbo refers to Jumbo (due to his big ears) in a mocking way. Source [Edited to clarify using "dumbo" as slang came after the movie]

  2. May 1, 2021 · Dumbo provides a charming fable of a little baby elephant who is unfairly rejected by society for having abnormally large ears. The titular character deals with bullying, physical abuse ...

    • Angus Castle
  3. Mar 31, 2019 · Based on a then-unpublished children’s book by Helen Aberson and Harold Pearl, which Disney acquired the rights to in the late 1930s, “Dumbo” was initially conceived as a short.

    • todd.martens@latimes.com
    • Game Critic
  4. Mar 28, 2019 · In several ways, this weekend’s Dumbo remake is like Tim Burton movies that have come before it: a new take on a beloved story, made for Disney, again indicating that the inventive mind behind...

  5. Aug 17, 2012 · Dumbo, being no dummy, disagrees, until the mouse says he’s got a magic feather. If Dumbo would just hold the magic feather in his trunk, open up his wings and jump off the high-dive platform, he would fly.

  6. Apr 4, 2019 · CBT therapist Alastair Barrie offers the following advice on how this parable can be applied to gain the most benefit from Cognitive Behavioural Therapy. For those unfamiliar with the story, the titular Dumbo is a young circus elephant with huge ears.

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  8. Jun 7, 2016 · First and foremost, Dumbo is about the love a mother has for its child. There’s been a lot of great parent-child relationships in movies—Scout and Atticus, Simba and Mufasa, Steve Martin and his dozen kids—but there’s something so emotionally impactful about the relationship between Mrs. Jumbo and little Dumbo.

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