Zoomorphism

The word zoomorphism derives from the Greek ζωον (zōon), meaning “animal”, and μορφη (morphē), meaning “shape” or “form”. It can mean:

Art that imagines humans as non-human animals
Art that portrays one species of animal like another species of animal
Art that creates patterns using animal imagery, or animal style
Deities depicted in animal form, such as exist in ancient Egyptian religion
Therianthropy: the ability to shapeshift into animal form
Attributing animal form or other animal characteristics to anything other than an animal; similar to but broader than anthropomorphism
The tendency of viewing human behaviour in terms of the behaviour of animals, contrary to anthropomorphism, which views animal or non-animal behaviour in human terms

Examples
Zoomorphic representation in religion
The appearance of the Holy Spirit like a dove in the New Testament (The Gospel According to Luke 3: 22), “and the Holy Spirit descended on him in bodily form like a dove…”
Mark the Evangelist as a lion in later Christian iconography.
The Egyptian gods were often depicted as zoomorphic or as hybrid
The names of the two most prominent Hebrew Bible female prophets – Deborah and Huldah – were in the Babylonian Talmud interpreted in zoomorphic terms as “wasp” and “weasel.”
Zoomorphic language for things, ideas
A literary phrase such as “The roar of the ocean”.
Sin lurking like a beast waiting to devour Cain in Genesis.
Humanity portrayed in evolutionary context
Desmond Morris in The Naked Ape and The Human Zoo, Robert Ardrey in African Genesis and Konrad Lorenz in On Aggression all wrote from a sociobiological perspective. They viewed the human species as an animal, subject to the evolutionary law of Survival of the fittest through adaptation to the biophysical environment.

Other
Fenrisulfr, a wolf in Norse mythology
Airavata, the king god of elephants in Indian mythology.
Paw feet bathtub, with feet in the shape of a lion’s paws
The sphinx from the “Oedipus Rex” by Sophocles
Elephantine Colossus, a hotel
Equestropomorphism, animating objects that take the actions of a horse. For instance, in Bedknobs and Broomsticks, the army that fights the Nazis is composed of anthropomorphized knightly body armor and equestropomorphized horse armor.
In The Flintstones and Night at the Museum, the dinosaurs Dino and “Rexy” behave and vocalize like dogs.
Aslan in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is a lion that is the king of Narnia
Robotic pets, like AIBO, modeled on dogs or other animals
In 2010 city planners from Southern Sudan, which would become independent a year later, unveiled plans for the city center of its capital, Juba, to be built in the shape of a rhinoceros. The city of Wau was to be transformed in the shape of a giraffe.

Source From Wikipedia