meerkat
English
Etymology
From Afrikaans meerkat, transferred use of Dutch meerkat (“guenon [monkey]”, literally “lake cat”), compare English mercat. Sometimes suggested to be influenced by or derived from an Indian source; compare Hindi मर्कट (markaṭ, “ape, monkey”) and Sanskrit मर्कट (markaṭa).[1]
Noun
meerkat (plural meerkats)
- Suricata suricatta, a small carnivorous mammal of the mongoose family, from the Kalahari Desert, known for its habit of standing on its hind legs.
- Synonym: suricate
Translations
small carnivorous mammal
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Further reading
meerkat on Wikipedia.Wikipedia Suricata suricatta on Wikispecies.Wikispecies
References
- “meerkat” (US) / “meerkat” (UK) in Oxford Dictionaries, Oxford University Press.
Afrikaans
Dutch
Etymology
From Middle Dutch meercatte (“monkey, ape”), from Old Dutch *merikatta. Cognate with merikazza (German Meerkatze).
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈmeːrˌkɑt/, [ˈmɪːrˌkɑt]
Audio (file) - Hyphenation: meer‧kat
Noun
meerkat f (plural meerkatten, diminutive meerkatje n)
- guenon (one of a number of monkeys of the genus Cercopithecus)
- Bas Vlugt, Namibië, Botswana en Zimbabwe, 2013.
- De groene meerkat of velvet monkey (Cercopithecus aethiops) is de meest voorkomende aap in zuidelijk Afrika.
- Bas Vlugt, Namibië, Botswana en Zimbabwe, 2013.
Descendants
- Afrikaans: meerkat
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