Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 28, 2017 · The modern form of the English word is attested by c. 1600 and is via French girafe (13c.). Replaced earlier camelopard (from Latin camelopardalis), which was the basis form the name of the "giraffe" constellation Camelopardalis, among those added to the map 1590s by Flemish cartographer Petrus Plancius.

    • Deutsch (German)

      Jahrhundert). Sie ersetzte das frühere camelopard...

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      camelopard 뜻: 기린; 14세기 후반 "기린"을 뜻하는 옛날 이름은 라틴어 Late Latin...

  2. Etymology. First attested in English in 1785, the word camelopardalis comes from Latin, and it is the romanization of the Greek "καμηλοπάρδαλις" meaning "giraffe", from "κάμηλος" (kamēlos), "camel" + "πάρδαλις" (pardalis), "spotted", because it has a long neck like a camel and spots like a leopard.

    • 2, 8
    • β Cam (4.03ᵐ)
    • 4
  3. People also ask

  4. Its name comes from the Latin derivation of the Greek word for “giraffe.” Taken apart, the word camelopardalis means camel (Greek kamēlos ) and leopard ( pardalis ). The giraffe was called the “camel-leopard” because it had a long neck like a camel and a body with spots, like a leopard.

  5. in astronomy, a constellation of the Northern Hemisphere. Camelopardalis, Latin for “giraffe,” is a circumpolar constellation—that is, it lies near the north celestial pole, and at most latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere it never sets. Camelopardalis lies west of Ursa Major and north of Auriga.

  6. Camelopard, some­times spelled cameleop­ard, is the more tra­di­tional Eng­lish ex­pres­sion for a gi­raffe. It comes from Greek kamēlopárdalis, de­rived from kámēlos “camel” and párdalis “leop­ard”, and was com­mon until the late 19 th cen­tury.

  7. Jul 22, 2016 · The word “Camelopardalis” is a marriage between the Greek words kamelos (camel), and pardalis (leopard), which taken together describes how the ancients saw a giraffe; an animal with a long neck like a camel and spots like a leopard.

  8. Latin: “Giraffe” Camelopardalis, constellation in the northern sky at about 6 hours right ascension and 70° north in declination. Its brightest star is Beta Camelopardalis, with a magnitude of 4.0. Dutch cartographer Petrus Plancius introduced this constellation on a celestial globe he made in 1612 and represented it as a giraffe.

  1. People also search for