Posted on 04/18/2004 8:50:30 AM PDT by redhead
While all animal adjectives don't end in -ine (simian, for instance), most of them do. There are -ine terms for more animals than most people know. Here's a short list of some of the lesser-known entries on the list:
bats pteropine
bulls taurine
crows corvine
deer cervine
eagles aquiline
fish piscine
foxes vulpine
frogs ranine
geese anserine
hares leporine
horses equine
kangaroo macropodine
lobster homarine
mice murine
peacocks pavonine
pigs porcine
seals phocine
sheep ovine
ticks acarine
wasps vespine
wolves lupine
So the next time you're out in your back yard, think how impressed your next door neighbors will be when you point to a squirrel and calmly say: "My, what a fine sciurine specimen." You just can't argue with that kind of knowledge.
Rantisi is supine.
The suffix -ine is generally applied to the Latin root, while the suffix -like is generally added to the English root.
So, for instance, lupine means wolflike; Divine means Godlike; and assinine means donkeylike.
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