Moose

来自Big Physics

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early 17th century: from Eastern Abnaki mos .


Ety img moose.png

wiktionary

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Earlier mus, moos, from an Eastern Algonquian language name for the animal, such as Massachusett moos, mws, Narragansett moos or Penobscot mos (cognate to Abenaki moz), from Proto-Algonquian *mo·swa(“it strips”), referring to how a moose strips tree bark when feeding: compare Massachusett moos-u(“he strips, cuts smooth”). [1] [2]

Japanese むすめ(“girl”).


etymonline

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moose (n.)

"large quadruped mammal of northern North America noted for its enormous horns," 1610s, from an Algonquian language, probably Narragansett moos or Abenaki moz (compare Penobscot muns, Ojibwa mooz, Unami Delaware /mo:s/), said by early sources to be from moosu "he strips off," supposedly in reference to the animal's stripping bark for food in winter. The plural also is moose. The Loyal Order of Moose fraternal and service organization was founded in 1888.