T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
994.1 | | PRSSOS::MAILLARD | Denis MAILLARD | Fri Aug 07 1992 00:51 | 5 |
| Re .0:
>2. What's a female goose called? A goose?
A female goose is a goose, a male goose is a gander.
Denis.
|
994.2 | byre | LINGO::KNOWLES | Spelling chequers are knot the hole answer | Fri Aug 07 1992 06:35 | 3 |
| That's where a cow lives.
b
|
994.3 | gooses (v.t.)- 3rd person singular of ... | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Aug 07 1992 07:02 | 10 |
| re .1, ok, so the matrix for goose is so far:
common word: goose
latin: ??
male: gander
female: goose
young: gosling
plural: geese
collective: gaggle
habitat: ??
|
994.4 | But only for some | TLE::JBISHOP | | Fri Aug 07 1992 08:36 | 3 |
| There's also the heifer/cow and bull/ox distinctions for some
animals.
-John Bishop
|
994.5 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:16 | 10 |
| common word: goose
latin: anserine
male: gander
female: goose
young: gosling
plural: geese
collective: gaggle
habitat: By nature, wetlands; by human agency, farmyards
participle: Eeee-yow!
|
994.6 | And don't forget the gelding <8-O | MCIS5::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:20 | 5 |
| I thought the heifer was a female calf (as a filly is a female foal). What's
a male calf (colt being the male foal)? And isn't an ox a whole 'nother breed?
Baffled in the barn (a half 'nother time),
Leslie
|
994.7 | Definitions from American Heritage | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:35 | 3 |
| An ox is "an adult castrated bull." A steer is "a young ox, esp. one raised
for beef." A bullock is "a steer or young bull." So I suppose a bullock
could be the male equivalent of a heifer.
|
994.8 | horse (v.i.) ... | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:41 | 13 |
| Actually, Dick, I'm not sure about your habitat for geese. Chicken go
in a coop. Pigs in a sty or pen (not sure which is more accurate). Are
geese not penned (or is it pent) up?
common word: horse
latin: equine
male: stallion, gelding (depending on pre- or post-op; any others?)
female: mare (others?)
young: colt or foal (not sure if sex distinguishes these)
plural: horses
collective: herd??
habitat: ??
|
994.9 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:45 | 10 |
| Mike,
A colt is a young male horse; a filly is a young female horse. A foal
is a young horse of unspecified gender. The proper habitat for horses
is a range.
I've seen geese left free to wander the farmyard at innumerable farms
where friends have lived. At other farms, I've seen them fenced in.
-dick
|
994.10 | | STAR::CANTOR | Dave Cantor | Sat Aug 08 1992 08:26 | 3 |
| The plural of 'cow' is 'kine'.
Dave C.
|
994.11 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Sat Aug 08 1992 13:07 | 6 |
| RE .9
>> The proper habitat for horses is a range.
Ah. Interesting. We call it a race course.
|
994.12 | Must be a well schooled horse. | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Sun Aug 09 1992 08:45 | 1 |
| Do they get a diploma?
|
994.13 | When is a rat-hole a wild goose chase | LINGO::KNOWLES | Spelling chequers are knot the hole answer | Mon Aug 10 1992 05:58 | 4 |
| I have often wondered whether a `wild goose chase' involves a question
that has no _anser_.
b
|
994.14 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Mon Aug 10 1992 07:29 | 6 |
| Re: cow/cattle/kine
Actually, "cattle" is a generic plural for domestic farm animals.
Horses, kine, hogs, sheep, etc., are all "cattle."
-dick
|
994.15 | | STARCH::HAGERMAN | Flames to /dev/null | Mon Aug 10 1992 08:45 | 13 |
| My grandfather, professional dairy farmer, called castrated bulls
'steers'. My wife, suburban bred, thought that the stuff at
the butcher shop that you put into ox-tail soup was some kind of
sausage (really it's the tail of a steer).
Another class you need is for a cross-species neuter
animal like the mule (donkey father, horse mother) and hinny
(horse father, donkey mother).
Also, what's the generic singular for the animal that's a cow if she's
a female and a bull if he's male? This has always bothered me...
Doug.
|
994.16 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Mon Aug 10 1992 10:54 | 5 |
| A cross-species neuter such as the mule or hinny is a "neuter hybrid."
A single unspecified member of the bovie persuasion is a bovine.
-dick
|
994.17 | | ENABLE::glantz | Mike @TAY 227-4299 TP Eng Littleton | Mon Aug 10 1992 10:58 | 52 |
| Ah yes, home, home on the range ... except it's deer and antelope out
there ... never heard of horses.
Interesting, I had never heard of "kine" before. And, until recently,
didn't realize that an ox was the same species as a steer (always
thought it was a different species like maybe a bison or something).
Q: Are donkeys and burros the same species? What about asses (please
spare us the wise cracks :-)?
So lions travel in a pride. And the young of big cats are cubs, not
kittens. Seals have pups. Elephants have calves (or is it calfs?).
Swans have signets.
Some more questions:
What's a hog, a pig, and a sow? What exactly does "swine" mean?
Goats:
Latin: ? (must be something like caprum or something)
Male: billy
Female: nanny
Young: kid
Ducks:
Latin: ?
Male: drake
Female: ?
Young: duckling
Dogs:
Latin: canine
Male: sire (is this correct?)
Female: bitch
Young: puppy
Interesting that neutered males and females go by different words than
their intact counterparts (e.g., "eunuch").
Turkeys:
Latin: ?
Male: tom
Female: hen
Young: ?
Chickens:
Latin: ?
Male: cock, rooster, and something else
Female: hen, and something else
Young: chick
Q: What birds are properly called "fowl"?
|
994.18 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Mon Aug 10 1992 12:56 | 51 |
| Re: .17
> Ah yes, home, home on the range ... never heard of horses.
Before horses were domesticated, they lived on ranges - and when they
escape their human masters, they revert; vide the (formerly domestic
Spanish) mustangs of the American Southwest.
> Interesting, I had never heard of "kine" before.
Look at the King James Version of the Bible, specifically Genesis
chapter 41, the pharaoh's dream of the seven fat kine and the seven
lean kine.
> Q: Are donkeys and burros the same species? What about asses (please
> spare us the wise cracks :-)?
Yes. They are all three the species "Equus asinus." Asinus is the
Latin for donkey/ass. "Burro" is Spanish.
> Swans have signets.
That's spelled "cygnet."
> What's a hog, a pig, and a sow? What exactly does "swine" mean?
A hog is an adult male swine. A sow is an adult female. A pig is a
young swine. "Piglet" is a variation of "pig." "Swine" refers to
animals of the family Suidae (both wild and domestic).
> Goats:
> Latin: caper or, more usually, hircus; hence the adjective hircine.
> Ducks:
> Latin: anas is the Latin, I don't know the English form.
> Female: duck
> Dogs:
> Latin: canine
> Male: dog (sire is the term for the father of a canine.)
> Chickens:
> Latin: pullus or gallinaceus, hence gallinacious
> Q: What birds are properly called "fowl"?
Properly, all birds are fowl. In animal husbandry, the term is
restricted to gallinaceous birds such as chickens, turkeys, guinea
fowl, etc.
-dick
|
994.19 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:17 | 5 |
| > > Swans have signets.
>
> That's spelled "cygnet."
Swans wearing a certain kind of ring have signets.
|
994.20 | Look like kine to me | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Motivationally Challenged | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:19 | 15 |
| > My grandfather, professional dairy farmer, called castrated bulls
> 'steers'. My wife, suburban bred, thought that the stuff at
> the butcher shop that you put into ox-tail soup was some kind of
> sausage (really it's the tail of a steer).
Reminds me of a visit from some city folk friends when I was
growing up in rural Virginia. As we passed a HERD of CATTLE:
Junior: Look, Daddy! Look at all those bulls!
Mr. City Folk: Those aren't bulls, son, they're cows.
Needless to say, they were all steer.
-- Cliff
|
994.21 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Mon Aug 10 1992 19:52 | 12 |
| common word: operating system
latin root: ??
male: MULTICS
female: VMS
neuter: UNIX
young--
male+female: none known
male+neuter: none known
female+neuter: ULTRIX
plural: flames (followups directed to alt.religion.computers)
collective: anarchy
habitat: computer
|
994.22 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Tue Aug 11 1992 06:57 | 6 |
| Close, Norman, very close.
common word: operating system
latin root: ratio, hence rational (i.e., systematic, logical)
young: NeXT
male+neuter: UNIX (recursive function)
|
994.23 | Why not do ourselves? | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Motivationally Challenged | Tue Aug 11 1992 07:03 | 9 |
| common word: JOYOFLEXus
latin root: nota bene
male: bull
female: notrix
neuter: IMHO
young: read-only
plural: JOYOFLEXii
collective: flame
habitat: rat hole
|
994.24 | Always a nitpicker in the crowd | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Tue Aug 11 1992 09:12 | 6 |
| Re: .23
The plural should be JOYOFLEXI, not JOYOFLEXII. The latter would be
correct only if the singular were JOYOFLEXIUS. :-)
-dick
|
994.25 | re -.1 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Feeling empowered now, boy | Tue Aug 11 1992 09:37 | 8 |
| > The plural should be JOYOFLEXI, not JOYOFLEXII. The latter would be
> correct only if the singular were JOYOFLEXIUS. :-)
Thank you. I put that in there just to make sure you all were
on your toes. The promptness of your response gives me renewed
faith in our flame of joyoflexi.
-- C
|
994.26 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Aug 11 1992 09:57 | 3 |
| Hmmm. I assumed the doubled i was merely a stuck keyboard. It simply
never occurred to me that anybody would make that mistake
intentionally, even as a test.
|
994.27 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Tue Aug 11 1992 10:10 | 8 |
|
>> Hmmm. I assumed the doubled i was merely a stuck keyboard. It simply
>> never occurred to me that anybody would make that mistake
>> intentionally, even as a test.
II thought the same thing.
|
994.28 | You assume Latin | TLE::JBISHOP | | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:25 | 14 |
| re .24 plural of 'joyoflexus' is 'joyoflexi', not '-ii'
Only if it's Latin.
English: joyoflexuses
German: Joyoflexusen or Joyoflexu"s or Joyoflexu"ser or ...
Arabic: joyoflexusoon or ...
Personally, it looks kind of French to me, so I'll suggest
Joyoflexeaux
-John Bishop
|
994.29 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Tue Aug 11 1992 14:13 | 10 |
| Re: .28
Actually, John, you're not entirely correct. The suffix -I to indicate
a plural of JOYOFLEXUS is acceptable in English; cf HIPPOPOTAMUS/-USES/
-I and OCTOPUS/-USES/-I and CACTUS/-USES/-I.
If Cliff chooses to define that his invented word is declined in the
Latin form, far be it from me to deny him that right.
-dick
|
994.30 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Tue Aug 11 1992 20:22 | 4 |
| JOYSOFLEX
^
On a whose separate matter, the plural of LEX is probably LICES.
|
994.31 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Wed Aug 12 1992 07:37 | 3 |
| The plural of LEX is LEGES - it means a group/collection of words.
-dick
|
994.32 | | HLFS00::STEENWINKEL | R80ST | Sun Aug 16 1992 07:13 | 15 |
| RE:.0
>common word: cat
>latin root: feline
>male: tom
>female: queen
>young: kitten
>plural: cats
>collective: ?? (is there a need for one??)
>habitat: couch :-)
- Rik -
whose cat has adopted the maxim: Bite the hand and it will feed you...
|
994.33 | car names | STARCH::HAGERMAN | Flames to /dev/null | Tue Oct 27 1992 11:30 | 23 |
| > <<< Note 994.28 by TLE::JBISHOP >>>
> -< You assume Latin >-
>
> re .24 plural of 'joyoflexus' is 'joyoflexi', not '-ii'
>
> Only if it's Latin.
>
> English: joyoflexuses
> German: Joyoflexusen or Joyoflexu"s or Joyoflexu"ser or ...
> Arabic: joyoflexusoon or ...
>
> Personally, it looks kind of French to me, so I'll suggest
>
> Joyoflexeaux
>
> -John Bishop
What might be the rule if it's a car with an invented name
from Japan: Lexus? Has anyone noticed the plural in an ad?
|
994.34 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | There's three sides to every story... | Tue Oct 27 1992 11:51 | 3 |
| Lexus is a trademark, so they talk about Lexus automobiles!
{^% andrew %^}
|