babirusa

See also: babi rusa

English

Etymology

From scientific Latin babyroussa (later as specific name), and its source, Malay babi rusa, from babi (pig) + rusa (deer).

Noun

babirusa (plural babirusas)

  1. Any of several mammals in the genus Babyrousa in the pig family Suidae, in which the upper tusk grows upward.
    • 2018, Hanneke Meijer, The Guardian, 17 May:
      And there are wild pigs, babirusas, with wrinkled skin and impressive upper tusks that instead of growing down, grow up and backwards toward the skull.

Hyponyms

Translations


Indonesian

Etymology

From babi (pig) + rusa (deer), from the resemblance of the tusks to antlers

Noun

babirusa (plural babirusa-babirusa, first-person possessive babirusaku, second-person possessive babirusamu, third-person possessive babirusanya)

  1. Buru babirusa, Babyrousa babyrussa

Spanish

Etymology

Borrowed from Malay babirusa.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /babiˈɾusa/, [baβiˈɾusa]

Noun

babirusa f (plural babirusas)

  1. babirusa

Further reading

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