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Origin and history of zebra

zebra(n.)

African mammal related to the horse and ass, having the body more or less completely striped, c. 1600, from Italian zebra, perhaps via Portuguese, earlier applied to a now-extinct wild ass, a word of uncertain origin, said to be Congolese [OED, 1989], or Amharic [Klein], but perhaps ultimately from Latin equiferus "wild horse," from equus "horse" (see equine) + ferus (see fierce). Related: Zebrine; zebroid.

Entries linking to zebra

"of, pertaining to, or resembling a horse," 1765, from Latin equinus "of a horse, of horses; of horsehair," from equus "horse" (from PIE root *ekwo- "horse").

mid-13c., "proud, noble, bold, haughty," from Old French fers, fiers, nominative form of fer, fier "strong, overwhelming, violent, fierce, wild; proud, mighty, great, impressive" (Modern French fier "proud, haughty"), from Latin ferus "wild, untamed, uncultivated; waste, desert;" figuratively "wild, uncultivated, savage, cruel" (from PIE root *ghwer- "wild beast").

Meaning "ferocious, wild, savage, cruel" of persons is from c. 1300; of beasts from late 14c. Original English sense of "brave, proud" died out 16c., but while this sense was current fierce often was used in English as an epithet (and thus surname), which accounts for the rare instance of a French word entering English in the nominative case. Related: Fiercely; fierceness. In Middle English sometimes also "dangerous, destructive; great, strong; huge (in number)." An early 15c. medical treatise has fers benes for "wild beans."

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