English
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) IPA(key): /ˌwʊlvəˈɹiːn/
Noun
wolverine (plural wolverines)
- A solitary, fierce mammal of the Mustelidae family, Gulo gulo.
1920, Peter B. Kyne, chapter IV, in The Understanding Heart:“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.”
Synonyms
Translations
Gulo gulo
- Arabic: شَرِه m (šarih), وُلْفِيرِين m (wulfīrīn)
- Armenian: կուղխ (hy) (kuġx), շատակերիկ (hy) (šatakerik)
- Bashkir: ҡоно (qono)
- Belarusian: расама́ха f (rasamáxa)
- Bulgarian: росома́ха (bg) f (rosomáha), ла́комец (bg) m (lákomec)
- Buryat: зээгэн (zeegen)
- Catalan: golut m
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: 狼獾 (zh) (lánghuān), 貂熊 (zh) (diāoxióng)
- Chukchi: ӄэпэр (qėpėr)
- Cree: ᑮᐦᑿᐦᐋᐦᑫᐤ (kiihkwahaahkew)
- Czech: rosomák (cs) m
- Danish: jærv (da) c
- Dutch: veelvraat (nl)
- Esperanto: gulo
- Estonian: ahm, kaljukass
- Faroese: jarvur m
- Finnish: ahma (fi)
- French: glouton (fr) m, carcajou (fr) m
- Gagauz: obur
- Galician: glutón m
- Georgian: სამურავი (samuravi)
- German: Vielfraß (de) m, Bärenmarder m
- Greek: γούλβεριν m (goúlverin)
- Hawaiian: woleweline
- Hebrew: גַּרְגְּרָן (he) m (garg'rán)
- Hungarian: rozsomák (hu)
- Icelandic: jarfi m
- Ido: glutemo (io)
- Inuktitut: ᖃᕝᕕᒃ (qavfik)
- Irish: glutan m
- Italian: ghiottone (it) m, volverina, ossifraga
- Japanese: クズリ (ja) (kuzuri), 貂熊 (ja), 屈狸 (ja)
- Kalmyk: зеегн (zeegn)
- Kazakh: құну (qūnu)
- Ket: кун (kùn)
- Khakas: хуну (xunu)
- Korean: 울버린 (ulbeorin)
- Lakota: škečátȟaŋka
- Latgalian: kņauss
- Latvian: āmrija f, tīnis m
- Lithuanian: ernis m
- Low German:
- German Low German: Veelfraat m
- Macedonian: лакомец m (lakomec)
- Malay: wolverin
- Mansi:
- Northern Mansi: тӯлмах (tūlmah)
- Mongolian: нохой зээх (noxoj zeex)
- Navajo: niłchiis
- Nivkh: кʼузр̌ (kʼuzř)
- Northern Sami: geatki
- Norwegian: jerv (no) m
- Ojibwe: gwiingwa'aage
- Old English: eorf m
- Old Norse: jerfr m, jarfr m
- Persian: ولورین (volverin)
- Polish: rosomak (pl) m
- Portuguese: carcaju (pt) m, glutão (pt) m
- Proto-Norse: ᛖᚱᚨᚠᚨᛉ m (erafaʀ)
- Romanian: polifag american m, gluton (ro) m
- Russian: росома́ха (ru) f (rosomáxa)
- Serbo-Croatian:
- Roman: gorska kuna f, rosomah m, žderonja (sh) m, žderavac m
- Shor: қунучақ (qunučaq)
- Slovak: rosomák m
- Slovene: rosomáh m
- Southern Altai: јеекен (ǰeeken), куну (kunu)
- Southern Sami: gierhkie
- Spanish: glotón (es) m, carcayú m
- Swahili: fisi-milima, wolverini
- Swedish: järv (sv) c
- Tatar: комагай (qomağay)
- Thai: วุลเวอรีน (wunwer-reen)
- Turkish: kutup porsuğu, ayı sansarı
- Tuvan: чекпе (çekpe)
- Udmurt: лакша (lakša)
- Ukrainian: росома́ха f (rosomáxa)
- Uyghur: بۆرە بورسۇق (böre borsuq)
- Vietnamese: chồn Gulo
- Yakut: сиэгэн (siegen)
|
References
- ^ Robert K. Barnhart, ed., Chambers Dictionary of Etymology (Edinburgh: Chambers, 2008), 1242.
See also