different between elephanta vs elephant
elephanta
elephanta From the web:
- what is elephanta caves
- what do elephants eat
- causes of elephantiasis
- what do elephants represent
- what eats elephants
- do elephants
- what color are elephants
- how to go elephanta caves
elephant
English
Etymology
From Middle English elefant, elefaunt, from Old French elefant, elefan, olifant, re-latinized in Middle French as elephant, from Latin elephantus, from Ancient Greek ?????? (eléph?s) (gen. ????????? (eléphantos)). Believed to be derived from an Afroasiatic form such as Proto-Berber *e?u (“elephant”) (compare Tahaggart Tamahaq êlu, Tamasheq alu) or Egyptian ?bw (“elephant; ivory”). More at ivory. Replaced Middle English olifant (from the aforementioned Old French form, from Vulgar Latin *olifantus), which replaced Old English elpend (“elephant”).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /??l?f?nt/, /??l?f?nt/
Noun
elephant (countable and uncountable, plural elephants)
- A mammal of the order Proboscidea, having a trunk, and two large ivory tusks jutting from the upper jaw.
- (in particular) Any member of the family Elephantidae not also of the genus Mammuthus.
- (figuratively) Anything huge and ponderous.
- (paper, printing) Synonym of elephant paper
- (Britain, childish) used when counting to add length, so that each count takes about one second
- Let's play hide and seek. I'll count. One elephant, two elephant, three elephant...
- (uncountable, obsolete) Ivory.
- He sent rich gifts of elephant and gold.
Synonyms
- (animal): Elephas maximus, Loxodonta africana
- (counting term): see Appendix:Words used as placeholders to count seconds
Hyponyms
- (animal): African bush elephant, African forest elephant, Indian elephant, African elephant
Derived terms
Descendants
Related terms
Translations
Further reading
- elephant on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- Elephant (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
Anagrams
- heptenal
Middle French
Noun
elephant m (plural elephans)
- elephant (animal)
Descendants
- French: éléphant
- Haitian Creole: elefan
- ? Romanian: elefant
- ? Irish: eilifint
- ? Norman: êléphant, éléphant
elephant From the web:
- what elephants eat
- what elephant has the biggest ears
- what elephants have tusks
- what elephants learn act
- what elephants are endangered
- what elephants represent
- what elephant gift ideas
- what elephants are endangered
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- elephanta vs elephant
- elephancy vs elephant
- chryselephantine vs elephant
- ravener vs raven
- nonsensical vs nonsense
- gratuitous vs gratis
- encyclopedical vs encyclopedia
- carnation vs incarnadine
- act vs active
- marchion vs march
- marquisate vs march
- army vs armour
- army vs arms
- abstruse vs abstrude
- ivory vs eburnation
- war vs warrior
- war vs warlord
- army vs armed
- burn vs bourn
- army vs armor