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jaguar
[ jag-wahr, -yoo-ahr; especially British jag-yoo-er ]
noun
- a large spotted feline, Panthera onca, of tropical America, having a tawny coat with black rosettes: now greatly reduced in number and endangered in some areas.
jaguar
/ ˈdʒæɡjʊə /
noun
- a large feline mammal, Panthera onca, of S North America, Central America, and N South America, similar to the leopard but with a shorter tail and larger spots on its coat
Word History and Origins
Origin of jaguar1
Word History and Origins
Origin of jaguar1
Compare Meanings
How does jaguar compare to similar and commonly confused words? Explore the most common comparisons:
Example Sentences
There’s no fishing, but wildlife sightings are common, including a very large cat — a black jaguar? — at water’s edge in early October.
In one movement, she becomes the enchanted voice of a jaguar; in another she channels the song of the toh.
"The jaguar and the caybara were so curious. They didn't run."
Though previously preyed upon by jaguars, the latter have almost disappeared in Argentina, and now the rodents, which reproduce at a high rate, as many rodents do, have increased in population.
Lundberg and his diver companion had found fossils in the same place before, including mammoth teeth, bones of an ancient jaguar and parts of a dire wolf.
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