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aye-aye
[ ahy-ahy ]
noun
- an endangered species of omnivorous lemur, Daubentonia madagascariensis, the world’s largest nocturnal primate, having rodentlike incisors and long fingers: its extremely rare foraging technique involves gnawing small holes in trees and extracting grubs with its distinctly thin middle finger.
aye-aye
/ ˈaɪˌaɪ /
noun
- a rare nocturnal arboreal prosimian primate of Madagascar, Daubentonia madagascariensis , related to the lemurs: family Daubentoniidae. It has long bony fingers and rodent-like incisor teeth adapted for feeding on insect larvae and bamboo pith
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Word History and Origins
Origin of aye-aye1
First recorded in 1775–85; from French, from Malagasy aiay, probably imitative of its cry
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Word History and Origins
Origin of aye-aye1
C18: from French, from Malagasy aiay, probably of imitative origin
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Example Sentences
An aye-aye—a type of lemur—was spotted on camera “digging for gold.”
From Scientific American
But if there’s a champion nose-picker, it’s got to be the aye-aye.
From Scientific American
It wasn't just any lemur; an aye-aye was filmed by Prof Anne-Claire Fabre from the University of Bern burying its elongated finger in its nostril.
From BBC
Certain primates like the aye-aye lemur have an extra thumb-like digit as well.
From New York Times
But they identified the same or similar mutation as humans in just six species — mostly those with a diet high in fruit and nectar, including flying foxes and aye-aye lemurs.
From New York Times
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