Animal Name Origins

By Miss Cellania in Bathroom Reader on Aug 30, 2010 at 5:05 am

GORILLA

“First used in a Greek translation of 5th century BC Carthaginian explorer Hanno’s account of a voyage to West Africa. He reported encountering a tribe of wild hairy people, whose females were, according to a local interpreter, called gorillas. In 1847 the American missionary and scientist Thomas Savage adopted the word as the species name of the great ape and by the 1850s it had passed into general use.” (From Dictionary of Word Origins, by John Ayto)

FERRET

(Image credit: Flickr user Stacy Lynn Baum)

Ferret comes from the Latin furritus, for ‘little thief,’ which probably alludes to the fact that ferrets, which are related to pole cats, like to steal hens’ eggs. Its name also developed into a verb, to ferret out, meaning ‘to dig out or bring something to light.’” (From Cool Cats, Top Dogs, and Other Beastly Expressions, by Christine Ammer)

SKUNK

“Because the little striped animal could squirt his foul yellow spray up to 12 feet, American Indians called him segankw, or segonku, the Algonquin dialect word meaning simply ‘he who squirts’. Early pioneers corrupted the hard-to-pronounce Algonquin word to skunk, and that way it has remained ever since.” (From Animal Crackers, by Robert Hendrickson)

HOUND

“Before the Norman conquest of England, French hunters bred a keen-nosed dog that they called the St. Hubert. One of their rulers, William, took a pack to England and hunted deer-following the dogs on foot. Saxons had never before seen a dog fierce enough to seize its prey, so they named William’s animals hunts, meaning ‘seizure’. Altered over time to hound, it was long applied to all hunting dogs. Then the meaning narrowed to stand for breeds that follow their quarry by scent.” (From Why You Say It, by Webb Garrison)

LEOPARD

(Image source: The Medieval Bestiary)

“It was once wrongly believed that the leopard was a cross between a ‘leo’ (a lion) and a ‘pard’ (a white panther)-hence the name ‘leopard.’” (From Why Do We Say It?, by Nigel Rees)

PYTHON

“According to Greek legend, the god Apollo’s earliest adventure was the single-handed slaying of Python, a flame-breathing dragon who blocked his way to Pytho (now Delphi), the site he had chosen for an oracle. From the name of this monster derives the name of the large snake of Asia, Africa, and Australia, the python.” (From Thou Improper, Thou Uncommon Noun, by Willard R. Espy)

CARDINAL

“One would think that such an attractive creature would have given its name to many things, but in fact it is the other way around. The bird’s name comes from the red-robed official of the Roman Catholic Church, who in turn was named for being so important-that is, from the adjective cardinal, from the Latin cardo, meaning ‘hinge’ or ‘pivot’. Anything cardinal was so important that events depended (hinged or pivoted) on it.” (From It’s Raining Cats and Dogs, by Christine Ammer)

MOOSE

“Captain John Smith, one of the original leaders at Jamestown, wrote accounts of the colony and life in Virginia, in which he defined the creatures as Moos, a beast bigger than a stagge. Moos was from Natick (Indian) dialect and probably derived from moosu, ‘he trims, he shaves,’ a reference to the way the animal rips the bark and lower branches from trees while feeding.” (From The Chronology of Words and Phrases, by Linda and Roger Flavell)

FLAMINGO

(Image credit: Flickr user Luis Argerich )

“This long-legged pink wading bird is named for the people of Flanders, the Flemings, as they were called. Flemings were widely known for their lively personalities, their flushed complexions, and their love of bright clothing. Spaniard explorers in the New World thought it was a great joke naming the bird flamingo, which means ‘a Fleming’ in Spanish.” (From Facts on File Encyclopedia of Words and Phrase Origins, by Robert Hendrickson)

_________________________________

The article above is reprinted with permission from Uncle John’s Unstoppable Bathroom Reader.

Since 1988, the Bathroom Reader Institute had published a series of popular books containing irresistible bits of trivia and obscure yet fascinating facts.

If you like Neatorama, you’ll love the Bathroom Reader Institute’s books – go ahead and check ‘em out!


Email This Post
Tweet This Post 
Share This Post on Facebook

Tags: ,


Neat stuff from the NeatoShop:


  1. GailPink
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 6:01 am

    I love the story about the Flamingos!

  2. bellhog
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 10:16 am

    Nice post, too bad part of it is demonstrably wrong. “Hound” was the default term for “dog” among the Saxons long before the French ever showed up in England. Compare with German Hund “dog”. Actually, with variations of “hound” found across Europe, the real question is where did the word “dog” come from?

  3. Muzition
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 10:24 am

    Those ferrets are adorable.

  4. BCL1
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 12:24 pm

    The origin of the word “dog” is actually one of the great mysteries of the history of the English language.

  5. dave1
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 3:54 pm

    I want to second the comment that the word hound comes from the German word for dog ‘hund’.

  6. bippy mcflippy
    Aug 30th, 2010 at 8:32 pm

    that ‘hunts’ example is classic e-mail etymology – absurd, totally at odds with known patterns of word-development, and sounds like something pulled right out of someone’s bottom.
    add that to ‘posh’ meaning ‘port out starboard home’ (rubbish) and a certain vulgar term reputed to mean something about unlawful carnal knowledge.

  7. sandyra
    Aug 31st, 2010 at 6:59 am

    I was a feeder at a nature center and we had a few ferrets there. The best thing about the job was giving the ferrets an egg and then watching them try to break it open. They got duck eggs (donated by a lady who raised ducks) which are a bit larger than hen’s eggs so they couldn’t crack them open with their jaws. They would try to bite them and they would roll them around and around until the egg would bash against the side of their cage. Then they would lie down and feast on the raw egg. They liked eggs more than anything else we could give them.

  8. Waynetd
    Sep 4th, 2010 at 6:39 am

    “Then the meaning narrowed to stand for breeds that follow their quarry by scent.”
    Below is a list of “hounds that hunt using sight.

    Sighthounds

    Afghan Hound
    Azawakh
    Borzoi (Russian Wolfhound)
    Chart Polski (Polish Greyhound)
    Galgo Español (Spanish Greyhound)
    Greyhound
    Hortaya Borzaya
    Irish Wolfhound
    Italian Greyhound
    Magyar Agar (Hungarian Greyhound)
    Saluki (Persian Greyhound)
    Scottish Deerhound
    Silken Windhound
    Sloughi
    Whippet


Keep track of the comments with Comment RSS

Don't Miss: New Stuff | Bestsellers | The Cute Store
                   Funny T-Shirts

Need a gift? Get unforgettable gifts for:
Geeks | Pranksters | Kids | Hipsters | Shutterbugs

Lijit Search

Old school? Bookmark us! RSS Feed Twitter Facebook Page