oliphant
See also: Oliphant
English
Alternative forms
Etymology
From Middle English olifaunt, from Anglo-Norman oliphant (“ivory, elephant”) and Old French oliphant (“ivory, elephant, musical horn of ivory”), from Latin elephantus (“elephant”), from Ancient Greek ἐλέφας (eléphas, “ivory, elephant”).
Noun
oliphant (plural oliphants)
- (archaic and historical) An elephant.
- 1613, Thomas Heywood, The Brazen Age, […], London: […] Nicholas Okes, […], →OCLC, Act II, signature [C4], verso:
- She [Diana] hath ſent (to plague vs) a huge ſauadge Boare,
Of an vn-meaſured height and magnitude.
[…]
His briſtles poynted like a range of pikes
Ranck't on his backe: his foame ſnowes where he feeds
His tuskes are like the Indian Oliphants.
- An ancient ivory hunting-horn.
Old French
Noun
oliphant oblique singular, m (oblique plural oliphanz or oliphantz, nominative singular oliphanz or oliphantz, nominative plural oliphant)
- alternative form of olifan