There are 2 possibilities, either arctophiles or ursaphiles, i'm not sure which sorry, i know it's not much help
there is a third and most common option children
An Arctophile.
There isn't a specific word for the collection, but someone who collects teddy bears is called an arctophile, and the act of collecting teddy bears is called arctophily. Also, the collective noun for teddy bears is "hug," so you could call a collection "a hug of teddy bears."
A teddy bear collector! jk, i didn't know there was one. A person who collects teddy bears is called an Arctophile.
Yep, It I Normally Know As Me To You Bears But You Can Also Call It Tatty Teddy
The teddy bears are in the game to just add substance to the maps. There is no reason for them other than this.
The reasoning behind teddy bears in call of duty is to signify an Easter egg spot on the map that would no be a regular spot that someone would go
AnswerThe Teddy Bears are I think Easter Eggs. They are placed in places that are hard to get to. In good hiding places and in sometimes random places just for fun.The teddy bears in the Infinity Ward games (MW1,MW2,MW3) refer to a developers daughter who died during the making of the games. In black ops the teddy bears belong to demon girl Samantha who is a doctors daughter who is infected by one of the main charcaters
whatv do you call the manor woman who collects fares on bus
It sort of is impossible because you have to find ten teddy bears in each level to unlock somthing
AnswerI consider them easter eggs. You usually find them in random spots, hiding spots, or hard to reach spots.
A person who collects beetles is a coleopterist.
President Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt inspired the first Teddy Bear. Although the Steiff Company in Germany produced a jointed stuffed bear in 1902, the First Teddy Bear was made by Rose and Morris Michtom with the influence of Teddy Roosevelt and Clifford Berryman. Here's why: On November 14, 1902, then-President Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt went to Mississippi to settle a border dispute between Mississippi and Louisiana. While there, he went on a hunting trip. The other members of the hunting party tied a black bear cub to a tree for President Roosevelt to shoot, but Roosevelt refused to harm the defenseless bear. The next day, political cartoonist Clifford Berryman, drew a cartoon showing President Roosevelt refusing to hurt the helpless bear. The cartoon's caption "Drawing the Line in Mississippi" refers to both the border dispute settlement and the hunting incident. This cartoon sparked the imagination of the country and of a shopkeeper in Brooklyn, New York. The shopkeeper, Morris Michtom, asked his wife, Rose, to make two plush stuffed bears for display in his shop's window. The popularity of the plush bears stuffed with excelsior and adorned with black shoe buttons for eyes quickly captivated the nation. To combine the stuffed bear phenomenon with Teddy Roosevelt, Morris Michtom asked the president for permission to call these stuffed bears "Teddy's Bear." Roosevelt said yes, and the Teddy Bear was born. You may ask, "Wouldn't there still be stuffed bears without Roosevelt, Berryman, and the Michtoms?" And the answer is yes. If Roosevelt had not refused to shoot the innocent bear cub, if Berryman had not drawn the cartoon, if the Michtoms had not displayed the stuffed bears, if the Michtoms had not asked permission to call them "Teddy's Bear," or if Roosevelt had not granted permission, there would still be stuffed bears. However, these stuffed bears would not be Teddy Bears. They may have been stuffed bears, jointed bears, German bears, Giengen bears, or even Leipzid Trade Fair bears, but they would not be known as Teddy Bears -- a name that is as synonymous with our nation's culture as baseball and apple pie.