Sheldrake
来自Big Physics
wiktionary
From Middle English sheld-(“parti-colored”) (akin to Middle Dutch shillede) + drake(“male duck”).
etymonline
sheldrake (n.)
early 14c., from sheld- "variegated" + drake "male duck." First element cognate with Middle Dutch schillede "separated, variegated," West Flemish schilde, from schillen (Dutch verschillen "to make different"), from Proto-Germanic *skeli-, from PIE root *skel- (1) "to cut." This is the origin considered most likely, though English sheld by itself is a dialect word attested only from c. 1500. OED finds derivation from shield (n.), on resemblance to the patterns on shields, "improbable."