The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations (29 page)

BOOK: The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations
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LEsLINE,
The Audubon Wildlife Treasury
 
 
Averaging perhaps twenty pounds, the wildcat seems to be a miniature cross between a tiger and a leopard, with a bit of mountain lion thrown in. Its rust-brown coat shows spots and flecks above and a suggestion of dark stripes below, blending into a white belly. Heavy lines on its wide-flaring cheek fur break up the outline of its face so it can see without being seen. A little tuft of hair on each ear serves as an antenna which is sensitive to sounds or air currents. Its whiskers, bedded in delicate nerves, may lie back—or reach out to determine if a certain opening will admit its body.
LES LINE,
The Audubon Wildlife Treasury
 
wasp
vespine
weasel
musteline
whale
cetacean, cetaceous
wild boar
aprine
wolf
lupine
woodpecker
piciform, picine
worm
vermicular, vermiform, vermian
zebra
zebrine, hippotigrine
 
 
The medieval monster was more massive than any dog, with a disproportionately large head that was wedge-shaped and elongated, ending in a pig’s snout. The body was at its highest behind the head, diminishing toward the hindquarters, from which a short, tufted, and upturned tail projected. This great mass was supported on relatively short, sticklike legs. The whole was clothed in thick coarse hair, black and white mixed to make gray—except that the feet and ears were black, as was a mane that rose like a crest from the top of the forehead to the middle of the back.
LES LINE,
The Audubon Wildlife Treasury
 
 
The alligator when full grown is a very large and terrible creature, and of prodigious strength, activity and swiftness in the water. I have seen them twenty feet in length, and some are supposed to be twenty-two or twenty-three feet. Their body is as large as that of a horse; their shape exactly resembles that of a lizard, except their tail, which is flat or cuneiform, being compressed on each side, and gradually diminishing from the abdomen to the extremity, which with the whole body is covered with horny plates or squam- mae, impenetrable....
WILLIAM BARTRAM,
Bartram

s Travels
 
 
The bulky body of the Muskrat is about a foot long and is covered with two kinds of hair: a short beautiful undercoat of soft and silky brown fur and a long coat of coarser hair. Its stout naked tail—almost as long as its body—is vertically flattened to aid in propulsion and steering when the animal is swimming. Its hind feet are partially webbed as another aid to progress in the water.
JOHN KIERAN,
Natural History of New York City
Types of Organisms
 
single-celled or acellular animal
protozoon
organism without a spinal column
invertebrate
organism with a spinal column
vertebrate
 
animal with hair that nourishes young with milk
mammal, mammalian
animal in family Hominidae (or that of man)
hominid
animal in superfamily of primates (man and apes)
hominoid
hoofed and usually horned herbivorous animal
ungulate
cud-chewing and even-toed animal
ruminant
animal with an abdominal pouch for the young
marsupial
animal feeding on refuse or carrion
scavenger
animal usually with a shell and jointed limbs
arthropod
small and large members of the cat family
felines
 
 
My first mountain beaver had gone head-first into a trap set at its burrow mouth by my cousin, Mary V., on her parents’ ranch above the Oregon coast. It was a grayish, unprepossessing-looking creature about a foot long, weighing two to five pounds. The appearance, to my five-year-old eyes, was grotesque: squinched slits where the eyes should be; crinkly, bare ears; no tail worthy of the name; toes splayed out exactly like those in illustrations of dinosaurs (but otherwise no similarity to the giant reptiles); four curving teeth stained as if from eons of conscientious tobacco chewing.
IRVING PETITE,
The Elderberry Tree
 
 
Among these insectivores it is possible to distinguish various standard forms. Thus the “shrew” type comprises animals that are usually small, with a long muzzle, short, five-toed feet and a fairly long tail. Most are plantigrades, scurrying through the dense undergrowth and feeding on tiny invertebrates.
AUGUSTO TAGLIANTI,
The World of Mammals
 
 
Despite being arboreal the gibbons of the subfamily Hylobatinae are the only monkeys that spontaneously adopt the bipedal stance when on the ground. Their walk is, however, rather odd and clumsy. The gibbons are also note- worthy for their exceptionally long arms and legs, especially the former, and for the absence of a tail.
AUGUSTO TAGLIANTI,
The World of maminals
 
squirrels and other relatively small gnawing animals
rodents
 
seals and other flippered aquatic animals
pinnipeds
 
 
The diet of tree-shrews is largely insectivorous and partly frugivorous, but in fact they are omnivorous and will eat anything that is digestible.
M. F. ASHLEY MONTAGU,
An Introduction to Physical Anthropology
 
 
The muskox has a single living relative, the takin of northern Tibet, a calflike animal of ponderous build with a bulging snout like a saiga antelope‘s, short, stout legs, and small, swept-back horns, showing the same montane sheep/goat ancestry in its conformation and movements as the modern muskox.
BARRY LOPEZ,
Arctic Dreams
 
 
Where the brown bear is broad-shouldered and dish-faced, the polar bear is narrow shouldered and Roman-nosed. His neck is longer, his head smaller. He stands taller than the brown bear but is less robust in the chest and generally of lighter build. The polar bear’s feet are larger and thickly furred between the pads. The toes are partially webbed, the blackish-brown claws sharper and smaller than the brown bear’s. It lacks the brown bear’s shoulder hump and more expressive face, with its prehensile lips, well suited to stripping bushes of their berries.
BARRY LOPEZ,
Arctic Dreams
General
Animal Traits
 
Note: Most of the following categorized terms, simple and in common usage, are presented here as a kind of checklist for the writer. They reflect the plain idiom used in most guides identifying different species of animals, and are included here to help remind the writer which aspects of an animal should not be forgotten in attempting to describe it.
 
Size
very large, massive, giant
large
greater
medium, intermediate
lesser
small
very small, pygmy
 
General Behavior
active
dormant
 
solitary, reclusive
gregarious, social
 
sedentary, settled
nomadic, migrating
 
Development
full-grown, mature
young, immature
 
 
The havtagai which, like domestic camels, have long lashes to shade their eyes from the sun’s glare, nostrils that can be closed against wind-driven sand, and two toes linked by pads that spread their weight over the shifting sand, differ from them in being uniformly sandy-colored, whereas domestic camels may also be dark brown, black, or even white. They differ also in their longer though fine-boned legs (lacking callosities) and small feet and pads that leave a footprint about half the size of a domestic camel‘s, in the thinner texture of their coats and the absence of mane and beard, and in their humps, which are small pointed cones and invariably firm, in contrast to those of domestic camels, which vary in size and condition according to their owner’s health.
RICHARD PERRY,
Life in Desert and Plain
 
 
Go to the meatmarket of a Saturday night and see the crowds of live bipeds staring up at the long rows of dead quadrupeds. Does not that sight take a tooth out of the cannibal’s jaw?
HERMAN MELVILLE,
Mohy-Dick
 
 
Adults may reach a length of six feet, excluding the stumpy tail, and weigh over 300 pounds. The thick, woolly coat is white, the legs, ears and patches around the eyes are black, and a black band reaches from the forelegs across the shoulders. The head is massive, and the skull provided with large ridges to which are attached the jaw muscles.
NOEL SIMON AND PAUL GEROUDET,
Last Survivors
 
 
The snub-nosed (or golden) monkey is related to the lan- gurs, but separated from them by an absence of cheek pouches and other anatomical differences. The species is distinguished by the thick-set body and sturdy limbs, with arms only a little shorter than the legs. The most distinctive external features are the long golden coat, which becomes denser and more brightly coloured with advancing age, and the bizarre snub-nose, which in adult males is so preposterously upturned that its tip reaches almost to the forehead.
NOEL SIMON AND PAUL GEROUDET,
Last Survivors
 
Body
long-bodied
short-bodied
heavy-bodied, stocky, stubby, chunky
low-slung
sleek-bodied, slender
 
Coloration
plain
colorful
 
marked
unmarked
 
regular (markings)
irregular
uniform
variable
alternating
dense
scattered
 
tinged, tinted, tipped, ringed (spots)
 
buff
tawny
dusky
grizzled
 
Areas of Body
above
below
on the back or top side, dorsal
on or along the side, lateral
on the stomach or underside, ventral
 
upperpart
underpart
 
front, anterior
hind, posterior
 
 
The monkey-eating eagle of the Philippines has a striking appearance with a superb “mane” of long tapering feathers covering its head and the nape of its neck, which it bushes out or raises at will and which, when excited, it wears like a warlike head-dress. Its bluish eyes and enormous curved beak, flattened on the sides, gives it an expression of extreme ferocity. The two sexes are alike, clad in dark brown plumage, striped with paler edges and whitish on the upper part.
NOEL SIMON AND PAUL GEROUDET,
Last Survivors
 
 
The Asiatic and African elephants are easily distinguishable. The Asiatic species is the smaller; the curvature of its back is convex; its skin is smooth and marked with white or pink depigmentation spots, which become more numerous with age; its ears are small and triangular-shaped; its forehead is prominently domed; its trunk is tipped with only a single finger-like protuberance; the female is tuskless, or more accurately, the tusks are so small that they do not protrude beyond the lips—and tuskless males are common.
NOEL SIMON AND PAUL GEROUDET,
Last Survivors
 
close together
widely spaced
joined
webbed
separated
 
near the attachment point, proximal
in the middle, mesial
at the end or extremity, distal, terminal
 
Parts of Body
well-developed
poorly developed
undeveloped or no longer used as a body part, vestigial
 
prominent, conspicuous
projecting, bulbous
distinguishing
sharply defined
 
protective
humped
armored
mantled (fold-like or hood-like)
 
elongate, elongated
broad
narrow
 
 
 
widening
tapering
flattened
curved upward, recurved
curved downward
 
sharp, pointed
blunt, rounded
angular, squarish, flattened
 
enlarged
reduced
 
 
The snow leopard, or ounce, is slightly smaller than the common leopard, and among the most attractive of all the great cats. In winter coat the fur [sic], particularly on the lower parts, is unusually long, with thick woolly under-fur. This, in conjunction with the short muzzle, has the effect of making the head appear disproportionately small. The general ground colour is pale charcoal, faintly tinged with cream: the under parts up to the chin are milk white. The black rosettes are large, irregularly shaped, and randomly distributed. The markings on the head, along the spine, and on the upper part of the tail are well defined, but where the fur is long they are somewhat blurred: the pattern is more distinct in summer coat. The tail is long and densely furred, with large rosettes on the upper surface, white beneath, and black-tipped.
BOOK: The Describer's Dictionary: A Treasury of Terms & Literary Quotations
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