different between hybrid vs huboon

hybrid

English

Etymology

Known in English since 1601, but rare before c.1850. From Latin hybrida, a variant of hibrida (a mongrel; specifically, offspring of a tame sow and a wild boar).

Pronunciation

  • enPR: h?'br?d, IPA(key): /?ha?.b??d/

Noun

hybrid (plural hybrids)

  1. (biology) Offspring resulting from cross-breeding different entities, e.g. two different species or two purebred parent strains.
  2. Something of mixed origin or composition; often, a tool or technology that combines the benefits of formerly separate tools or technologies.
    1. (linguistics) A word whose elements are derived from different languages.
    2. A hybrid vehicle (especially a car), one that runs on both fuel (gasoline/diesel) and electricity (battery or energy from the sun).
    3. (cycling) A bicycle that is a compromise between a road bike and a mountain bike.
    4. (golf) A golf club that combines the characteristics of an iron and a wood.
    5. An electronic circuit constructed of individual devices bonded to a substrate or PCB.
    6. A computer that is part analog computer and part digital computer.

Synonyms

  • (biology): bastard, crossbred/crossbreed/cross-breed, mixling

Translations

Adjective

hybrid (comparative more hybrid, superlative most hybrid)

  1. Consisting of diverse 'hybridized' components.

Translations

Related terms

See also

  • transgenic
  • cultivar

References

  • hybrid, page 216, chapter: A Miscegenation Vocabulary in Interracialism, Terms from the Oxford English Dictionary, book: Black White Intermarriage in American History, Literature and Law, Edited by Werner Sollor, Oxford University Press, 2000 [1]
  • hybrid in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
  • hybrid in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
  • hybrid at OneLook Dictionary Search

Norwegian Bokmål

Etymology

From Latin hibrida

Noun

hybrid m (definite singular hybriden, indefinite plural hybrider, definite plural hybridene)

  1. a hybrid

References

  • “hybrid” in The Bokmål Dictionary.

Norwegian Nynorsk

Etymology

From Latin hibrida

Noun

hybrid m (definite singular hybriden, indefinite plural hybridar, definite plural hybridane)

  1. a hybrid

References

  • “hybrid” in The Nynorsk Dictionary.

hybrid From the web:

  • what hybrid means
  • what hybrid replaces a 3 wood
  • what hybrid replaces a 5 iron
  • what hybridization is a triple bond
  • what hybrid replaces a 4 iron
  • what hybridization is a double bond
  • what hybrids to carry
  • what hybrid learning means


huboon

English

Etymology

Blend of human +? baboon

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?hju??bu?n/

Noun

huboon (plural huboons)

  1. A human-baboon hybrid; an ape-like person.
    • c. 1976, Devo, Huboon Stomp (song)
      I'm a huboon, baby, I'm a cross between a human and an ape
    • c. 1976, Devo, Soo Bawlz (song)
      She's got all the huboons crying her name
    • 1994, Joseph S. Berliner, "Transformation as Transplanation", in A World Fit For People, p. 88.
      Your first giddy reaction would be to wonder whether the patient, if he survived at all, would still be human being, [sic] or rather a baboon, or perhaps an entirely new hybrid species, no doubt to be called a "huboon."
    • 2004, "Mr. X", Shout It Out, Club Devo [1]
      Everything that 'makes the world go round', or 'progress with a price tag' as the huboons say on their way to work

Usage notes

Associated with the band Devo's concept of "de-evolution".

See also

  • apeman

huboon From the web:

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