different between mammoth vs towering

mammoth

English

Etymology

From obsolete Russian ??????? (mámant), modern ??????? (mámont), probably from a Uralic language, such as Proto-Mansi *m???-o?t (earth-horn). Compare Northern Mansi ??? (m?, earth), ????? (?n?t, horn). Adjectival use was popularized in the early 1800s by references to the Cheshire Mammoth Cheese presented to American paleontologist and president Thomas Jefferson.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?mæm??/

Noun

mammoth (plural mammoths)

  1. Any species of the extinct genus Mammuthus, of large, usually hairy, elephant-like mammals with long curved tusks and an inclined back, which became extinct with the last retreat of ice age glaciers during the late Pleistocene period, and are known from fossils, frozen carcasses, and Paleolithic cave paintings found in North America and Eurasia.
  2. (obsolete) A mastodon.
  3. (figuratively) Something very large of its kind.
    • 1973, Jeffrey Potter, Disaster by Oil (page 46)
      That is a lot of ship, about the the size of big tankers before they grew so rapidly to become supers, mammoths and oilbergs.

Translations

Descendants

  • ? Arabic: ???????? (m?m??)
  • ? Hebrew: ????????? (mamúta)
  • ? Hindi: ???? (maimath)
  • ? Japanese: ???? (manmosu)
  • ? Khmer: ???????? (maammout)
  • ? Korean: ??? (maemeodeu)
  • ? Thai: ?????? (m?m-m???t)

Adjective

mammoth (comparative more mammoth, superlative most mammoth)

  1. Comparable to a mammoth in its size; very large, huge, gigantic.
    • 1898, Guy Wetmore Carryl, The Arrogant Frog and the Superior Bull, in Fables for the Frivolous (With Apologies to La Fontaine),
      “Ha! ha!” he proudly cried, “a fig / For this, your mammoth torso! / Just watch me while I grow as big / As you—or even more so!”
    • 1999, Albert Isaac Slomovitz, The Fighting Rabbis: Jewish Military Chaplains and American History, New York University Press, page 103.

Synonyms

  • (very large): colossal, enormous, gigantic, huge, titanic
  • See also Thesaurus:gigantic

Derived terms

Translations

Further reading

  • mammoth on Wikipedia.Wikipedia

mammoth From the web:

  • what mammoth means
  • what mammoth eat
  • what mammoth cave tour is the best
  • what mammoth look like
  • what's mammoth in french
  • what mammoth live
  • mammoth task meaning
  • what mammoth donkey


towering

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?ta?????/

Verb

towering

  1. present participle of tower

Adjective

towering (comparative more towering, superlative most towering)

  1. Very tall or high, so as to dwarf anything around it.
    • So this was my future home, I thought! [] Backed by towering hills, the but faintly discernible purple line of the French boundary off to the southwest, a sky of palest Gobelin flecked with fat, fleecy little clouds, it in truth looked a dear little city; the city of one's dreams.
    • 1964, Look (volume 28, page 338)
      She is a towering girl with a husky baritone voice and a friendly and flamboyant style.

Translations

Noun

towering (plural towerings)

  1. The act or condition of being high above others.
    • 1787, Robert Burns, letter to a friend
      But I am an old hawk at the sport; and wrote her such a cool, deliberate, prudent reply, as brought my bird from the aerial towerings, pop down at my foot like Corporal Trim's hat.

See also

  • tower over
  • towering inferno

towering From the web:

  • towering meaning
  • what is a towering figure meaning
  • what towering inferno
  • towering what does this mean
  • what's eiffel towering mean
  • what is towering trio
  • what two towering works
  • what is towering cumulus clouds
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