Word of the
Day for Thursday 20th February 2014
Bestiary \BES-chee-er-ee, BEES-\, noun:
a
collection of moralized fables, especially as written in the Middle Ages, about
actual or mythical animals.
It
was pieced together into no named pattern native to this country, not star
flower or flying bird of churn dasher or poplar leaf, but was some entirely
made-up bestiary or zodiac of half-visionary creatures.
-- Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain, 1997
-- Charles Frazier, Cold Mountain, 1997
An
inexperienced heraldist resembles a medieval traveller who brings back from the
East the faunal fantasies influenced by the domestic bestiary he
possessed all along rather than by the results of direct zoological
exploration.
-- Vladamir Nabokov, Speak, Memory, 1951
-- Vladamir Nabokov, Speak, Memory, 1951
Bestiary is from the Latin bestiaries meaning
"a fighter against beasts in the public entertainments." It entered
English in the 1620’s.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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