˜yÐÄvlog

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camelopard

[ kuh-mel-uh-pahrd ]

noun

Archaic.
  1. a giraffe.


camelopard

/ kəˈmÉ›l-; ˈkæmɪləˌpÉ‘Ëd /

noun

  1. an obsolete word for giraffe
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged†2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of camelopard1

1350–1400; Middle English < Medieval Latin ³¦²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç±è²¹°ù»å³Ü²õ, for Latin ³¦²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç±è²¹°ù»åÄå±ô¾±²õ < Greek °ì²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç±èá°ù»å²¹±ô¾±²õ giraffe, equivalent to °ì᳾ŧ±ô´Ç ( s ) camel + pardalis pard 1
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of camelopard1

C14: from Medieval Latin ³¦²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç±è²¹°ù»å³Ü²õ, from Greek °ì²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç±è²¹°ù»å²¹±ô¾±²õ, from °ì²¹³¾Å§±ô´Ç²õ camel + pardalis leopard , because the giraffe was thought to have a head like a camel's and spots like a leopard's
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Example Sentences

Not until the seventeenth century did the English, who fixated on the giraffe’s camel-ish shape and leopard-ish coloring, stop calling it a camelopard.

From

One of the most attractive scenes for the Chinamen was a show of models of a great variety of wild animals, comprising almost everything, from a mouse to a camelopard.

From

The classic term “camelopard,†probably introduced when these animals were brought from North Africa to the Roman amphitheatre, has fallen into complete disuse.

From

As well try to turn camelopards into crocodiles or pythons into hippos, as convert Africans into Europeans.

From

They are called “Camel-thorns,†for the reason that the camelopard was fond of browsing upon their foliage.

From

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