different between bicorne vs unicorn
bicorne
English
Noun
bicorne (plural bicornes)
- Alternative form of bicorn (“two-cornered hat”)
Anagrams
- Briceno
French
Noun
bicorne m (plural bicornes)
- The two-cornered hat worn by Napoleon Bonaparte.
- In French fairy tales, a two-horned monster that eats adulterous husbands.
See also
- tricorn, tricorne
- unicorn
Further reading
- “bicorne” in Trésor de la langue française informatisé (The Digitized Treasury of the French Language).
Italian
Adjective
bicorne (plural bicorni)
- two-horned
Related terms
- bicorno
Anagrams
- bercino
Latin
Adjective
bicorne
- nominative neuter singular of bicornis
- accusative neuter singular of bicornis
- vocative neuter singular of bicornis
Spanish
Adjective
bicorne (plural bicornes)
- two-horned
bicorne From the web:
unicorn
English
Etymology
From Middle English unicorne, unikorn, from Anglo-Norman unicorne, Old French unicorne, and their source, Latin ?nicornis, from ?nus (“one”) + corn? (“horn”). Other senses from either rarity (e.g., possessing multiple skills) or by physical resemblance to having a horn (e.g., howitzer). The finance sense was coined by American investor Aileen Lee and first used in a 2013 article.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?ju?n?k??n/
- (US) IPA(key): /?jun?k??n/
Noun
unicorn (plural unicorns)
- A mythical beast resembling a horse or deer with a single, straight, spiraled horn projecting from its forehead.
- Hyponyms: pegacorn, unipeg, unisus
- Meronym: alicorn
- Holonym: blessing
- (historical) In various Bible translations, used to render the Latin unicornis or rhinoceros (representing Hebrew ??????): a reem or wild ox.
- Any large beetle having a horn-like prominence on the head or prothorax, especially the Hercules beetle, Dynastes tityus.
- A caterpillar, Schizura unicornis, with a large thorn-like spine on the back near its head.
- The kamichi, or unicorn bird.
- (military) A howitzer.
- Someone or something that is rare and hard to find.
- (sexual slang) A single, usually bisexual woman who participates in swinging and/or polyamory.
- (business) A person with multidisciplinary expertise, especially three or more skills in a young field such as UX design or data science (e.g., domain knowledge, statistics, and software engineering).
- Synonym: purple squirrel
- (finance) A startup company whose valuation has exceeded one billion U.S. dollars, which is solely backed by venture capitalists, and which has yet to have an IPO.
- Coordinate term: decacorn
- 2017, Pongsak Hoontrakul, Economic Transformation and Business Opportunities in Asia, Springer (?ISBN), page 273:
- In May 2016, out of 163 global unicorns, China had 31, with a total valuation of $154 billion or about 26 percent of global unicorn valuation.
- (attributive) Being many (especially pastel) colours; multicoloured.
- (historical) A 15th-century Scottish gold coin worth 18 shillings, bearing the image of a unicorn.
Derived terms
Translations
Verb
unicorn (third-person singular simple present unicorns, present participle unicorning, simple past and past participle unicorned)
- (sexual slang) To participate in a sexual threesome as a bisexual addition to an established heterosexual couple.
- (finance) To exceed a valuation of one billion U.S. dollars, while solely backed by venture capitalists.
See also
Further reading
- unicorn on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Category:unicorns on Wikimedia Commons.Wikimedia Commons
- unicorns on Wikiquote.Wikiquote
- unicorn at OneLook Dictionary Search
References
Catalan
Noun
unicorn m (plural unicorns)
- unicorn
Synonyms
- alicorn
Middle English
Noun
unicorn
- Alternative form of unicorne
Romanian
Etymology
From French unicorne.
Adjective
unicorn m or n (feminine singular unicorn?, masculine plural unicorni, feminine and neuter plural unicorne)
- one-horned
Declension
unicorn From the web:
- what unicorns live in
- what unicorn am i
- what unicorn are you
- what unicorn means
- what unicorns look like
- what unicorns eat
- what unicorns
- what unicorns actually look like
you may also like
- bicorne vs unicorn
- divergence vs estrangement
- diumide vs diamide
- thiocane vs thiolane
- sulfur vs thiocane
- carbon vs thiocane
- heterocycle vs thiocane
- saturated vs thiocane
- terms vs limpingly
- limpingly vs lumpingly
- limp vs limpingly
- slosh vs sloshingly
- terms vs rantingly
- pantingly vs rantingly
- cantingly vs rantingly
- burettes vs bulettes
- embarned vs embarked
- embarned vs embarged
- embalms vs emballs
- terms vs farrand