wolverine

See also: Wolverine

English

a wolverine

Alternative forms

Etymology

1619; alteration of earlier wolvering (1574), diminutive of wolver (ravenous or savage animal; person who behaves like a wolf) (1593),[1] ultimately from wolf.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈwʊlvəˌɹiːn/, /ˈwɒlvəˌɹiːn/, US also: /ˌwʊlvəˈriːn/

Noun

wolverine (plural wolverines)

  1. A solitary, fierce mammal of the Mustelidae family, Gulo gulo.
    • 1920, Peter B. Kyne, The Understanding Heart, Chapter IV
      “Wish I'd been more polite to that girl,” the sheriff remarked regretfully. “ I ain't had a bite to eat since four o'clock this morning, and I'm hungry as a wolverine. … I know she'd have give me another drink of that old moonshine she has.”
    1. A male wolverine, (a female wolverine being called an angeline).

Synonyms

geographic distribution of
wolverines

Translations

References

  1. Robert K. Barnhart, ed., Chambers Dictionary of Etymology (Edinburgh: Chambers, 2008), 1242.

See also

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