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    Shermy Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of Shermy? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Shermy from Peanuts and what is the personality traits.

    Shermy
    ISTJ

    ISTJ (6w5)

    Shermy personality type is ISTJ, the second most common personality type. The ISTJ personality type tends to be a rather quiet and reserved person, someone who is careful and diligent with their work and the way they go about doing things. When it comes to personal relationships, the ISTJ personality type is a very introverted person who likes to keep to themselves, preferring to have their own space and not getting too comfortable with others. They are very loyal to people they have relationships with, but they are not very good at being open and friendly with people who they do not know or have not already developed a relationship with. When it comes to their work, the ISTJ personality type is a perfectionist, someone who is very particular about the way things are done. They are usually very organized and even-keeled, going about doing things in a calm and steady manner. They do not like to complain or make a big deal out of anything, and they do not seem to be very expressive or emotional when they do things. The ISTJ personality type tends to be sort of a loner, preferring to spend their time alone, and they prefer it when others do the same.

    Shermy is a fictional character from the comic strip Peanuts, by Charles Schulz. Schulz named him after a friend from high school. When Peanuts made its debut on October 2, 1950, Shermy sat with another early character, Patty on the curb, and spoke the first lines of dialogue, ending with "Good ol' Charlie Brown...How I hate him!" which is ironic, considering how he became one of Charlie Brown's closest friends, along with Linus van Pelt and Schroeder. As Peanuts matured, however, Shermy became an extraneous character who was used less and less frequently, until his final appearance in 1969. In a television interview, Schulz said that in the 1950 debut of the strip, it was solely Charlie Brown, Snoopy, and a few minor characters, then showed the first strip, in which the "minor characters" he spoke of were clearly Patty and Shermy. Shermy's name first was mentioned on December 18, 1950, making him the last of the original characters to have their name revealed.

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