wildcat
English

Alternative forms
- wild-cat, wild cat
Etymology
From Middle English wyld cat, wylde cat (in the plural as wild cattes, wylde catis, wyle cattes), equivalent to wild + cat.
Its adjectival senses were originally American and derived from the "wildcat banks" of Michigan, following its elevation to statehood in 1837. Two laws—one easing the requirements for establishing a new bank and another occasioned by the Panic of 1837 that removed the need for payment in specie—led to the creation and collapse of around 50 banks within two years.[1][2] The term is apocryphally derived from a wildcat supposedly featured on the currency printed by one of these banks,[3] but more probably derived from the remote locations "where the wildcats roamed" chosen by these banks to avoid oversight and minimize redemption of notes.[4]
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈwaɪldˌkæt/
Audio (US) (file)
Noun
- A cat that lives in the wilderness, specifically
- (Britain) Felis silvestris, a common small Old World wild cat somewhat larger than a house cat.
- (US) A bobcat (Lynx rufus) or other similar New World species of lynx.
- Any feral cat.
- (uncommon) Alternative spelling of wild cat, any undomesticated felid, as tigers or lions.
- 2003 April 24, CNN
- Upon checking it out, we found a total of 13 newborn wildcats: nine newborn tigers and two newborn leopards.
- 2003 April 24, CNN
- (figuratively) A person who acts like a wildcat, (usually) a violent and easily-angered person or a sexually vigorous one.
- 2002 September 26, The Young and the Restless
- Anyone who's man enough to have landed a wildcat like you had to be quite a guy.
- 2002 September 26, The Young and the Restless
- (American football) An offensive formation with an unbalanced line and a snap directly to the running back rather than the quarterback.
- (nautical) A wheel that can be adjusted so as to revolve either with or on the shaft of a capstan.
- (firearms) Clipping of wildcat cartridge.
- (uncommon) Clipping of wildcat strike, a strike undertaken without authorization from the relevant trade union.
- (obsolete) Clipping of wildcat money, notes issued by a wildcat bank.
Synonyms
- (Eurasian wildcats): desert cat
- (American wildcats): See bobcat
- (wild house cats): See feral cat
Hyponyms
- (Eurasian wildcats, proper subspecies): European wildcat (Felis silvestris silvestris), African wildcat (F. s. lybica), Asiatic wildcat (F. s. ornata), Southern African wildcat (F. s. cafra), Chinese mountain cat (F. s. bieti)
- (Eurasian wildcats, informal types): Abyssinian wildcat, Arabian wildcat, Balearic wildcat, bay wildcats, bush wildcats, Caucasian wildcat, Corsica wildcat, Cretan wildcat, East African wildcat, forest wildcats, Hausa wildcat, Iraqi wildcat, Kalahari wildcat, Mid-belt wildcat, Mongolian wildcat, Rhodesian wildcat, Scottish wildcat, steppe wildcats, Syrian wildcat, Tristram's wildcat, Turkestan wildcat, Ugandan wildcat
Derived terms
- Abyssinian wildcat
- African wildcat
- Arabian wildcat
- Asian steppe wildcat
- Asiatic wildcat
- Balearic wildcat
- bay wildcat
- bush wildcat
- Caucasian wildcat
- Corsica wildcat
- Cretan wildcat
- East African wildcat
- European wildcat
- forest wildcat
- Hausa wildcat
- Iraqi wildcat
- Kalahari wildcat
- Martelli's wildcat
- Mid-belt wildcat
- Mongolian wildcat
- Near Eastern wildcat
- Rhodesian wildcat
- Scottish wildcat
- Southern African wildcat
- Syrian wildcat
- Tristram's wildcat
- Turkestan wildcat
- Ugandan wildcat
Translations
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- The translations below need to be checked and inserted above into the appropriate translation tables, removing any numbers. Numbers do not necessarily match those in definitions. See instructions at Wiktionary:Entry layout#Translations.
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Adjective
wildcat (not comparable)
- (usually derogatory) Of or concerning businesses operating outside standard or legitimate practice, especially:
- 1946, Sigurd Jay Simonsen, The Mongrels
- Then the development of the home country was neglected for some wildcat idea of bringing up the backward people of other lands.
- (derogatory, dated) Of or concerning irresponsible banks or banking, (particularly) small, independent operations.
- Of or concerning oil exploration in new areas, (particularly) small, independent operations.
- Of or concerning actions undertaken by workers without approval or in defiance of the formal leadership of their trade unions.
- 1946, Sigurd Jay Simonsen, The Mongrels
- (firearms) Of or concerning customized or hand-made cartridges.
- Unauthorized by the proper authorities.
- 2003 June 15, CNN
- Jewish settlers have also been active putting up five new wildcat outposts on hilltops in the West Bank to try to thwart their Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.
- 2003 June 15, CNN
Derived terms
- wildcat bank, wildcat banking, wildcat note, wildcat money, wildcat currency
- wildcat strike
Translations
Verb
wildcat (third-person singular simple present wildcats, present participle wildcatting, simple past and past participle wildcatted)
Derived terms
See also
Wildcat formation on Wikipedia.Wikipedia- (Eurasian wildcat): Martelli's wildcat (F. lunensis), sand cat, jungle cat, black-footed cat
- (American wildcat): See bobcat and lynx
References
- Wittmann, Matthew. "The Wildcat Bank of Brest" for Pocket Change: The Blog of the American Numismatic Society. 14 May 2015.
- Dunbar, Willis F. & al. Michigan: A History of the Wolverine State, pp. 222 ff.
- Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary. "Wild-cat". G. & C. Merriam Co., 1913.
- Dwyer, Gerald P. Jr. "Wildcat Banking, Banking Panics, and Free Banking in the United States" for Economic Review. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, 1996.