cougar
English

Alternative forms
Etymology
From FrenchCategory:English terms borrowed from French#COUGARCategory:English terms derived from French#COUGAR couguar, from PortugueseCategory:English terms derived from Portuguese#COUGAR cuguardo, a deformation of Brazilian PortugueseCategory:English terms derived from Brazilian Portuguese#COUGAR suçuarana (earlier çuçuarana), from Old TupiCategory:English terms derived from Old Tupi#COUGAR sûasuarana.[1]
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /ˈkuːɡə/Category:English 2-syllable words#COUGARCategory:English terms with IPA pronunciation#COUGAR
- (US) IPA(key): /ˈkuɡɚ/, [ˈkʰuɡɚ]Category:English 2-syllable words#COUGARCategory:English terms with IPA pronunciation#COUGAR
Category:English terms with audio pronunciation#COUGARAudio (General Australian): (file) - Hyphenation: cou‧gar
Noun
cougar (plural cougars)Category:English lemmas#COUGARCategory:English nouns#COUGARCategory:English countable nouns#COUGARCategory:English entries with incorrect language header#COUGARCategory:Pages with entries#COUGARCategory:Pages with 2 entries#COUGAR
- A wild feline, of species Puma concolor, native to the Americas.
- Synonyms: catamount, catamountain, mountain lion, painter, panther, puma, red tiger
- Hyponym: Florida panther
- 1792, Georges-Louis Leclerc, anonymous translator, Buffon's Natural History, volume 7, London: Printed by J.S. Barr, Bridges-Street, Covent-Garden, translation of original in French:
- They are found in Brasil, Paraguay, and in the country of the Amazons; and there is reason to believe that the animal, described by some travellers, under the name of the Ocorome, in Peru, is the same as the cougar, as well as that in the country of the Iroquois, which has been considered as a tiger, thought it is neither striped like that animal, nor spotted like the panther.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- 1831, Francis Smith Eastman, A history of the state of New York:
- The Cougar has entirely disappeared, or is very rarely met with. This animal was about the size of the wolf, of a gray color, strong, active, fierce and untameable.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- 1854, “The cougar, and an adventure with one”, in The Anglo-American Magazine, volume 4, page 84:
- The only indigenous long tailed cat in America north of the parallel of 30 degrees is the cougar. The wild cats, so called, are lynxes with short tails; and of these there are three distinct species.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- 2013 November 14, Alexa Keefe, Steve Winter, “A Cougar Ready for His Closeup”, in National Geographic, archived from the original on 1 March 2021:
- Winter’s task was to illustrate cougars—also known as mountain lions—in an urban environment. His research led him to biologist Jeff Sikich, whose work with a mountain lion population in the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area on the outskirts of L.A. seemed promising.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- (Canada, USCategory:Canadian English#COUGARCategory:American English#COUGAR, slangCategory:English slang#COUGAR, derogatoryCategory:English derogatory terms#COUGAR) An older woman who actively seeks the casual, often sexual, companionship of younger men, by implication a female “sexual predator”.
- Hypernyms: cradle robber, cradle snatcher, manther
- Coordinate terms: cub, MILF, sugar mama, toy boy, OWL
- A cougar approached Warren at the Palomino Club and asked for a dance.Category:English terms with usage examples#COUGAR
- [2001 June 7, Dan Savage, “Count Every Vote”, in The Stranger:
- I am 26 years old and in a respectful but super-sexual relationship with a recent divorcée in her 40s. (A "cougar," in local slang.)]Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- 2010, “Home Wreckers”, in How I Met Your Mother, season 5, episode 20 (television production):
- Barney Stinson: She's a cougar, Ted! / Robin Scherbatsky: I thought you said you can't be a cougar if you're over 50.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
- 2011, Donna McDonald, Dating A Cougar, →ISBN:
- “Younger can be good. How much younger?” Regina asked, inspecting the appetizer plates for any lingering bites. “I don't know,” Alexa said frowning. “Why does that matter?” “Less than eight years makes you a Puma. Over eight years makes you a Cougar,” Regina said wisely, grinning as Lauren nodded excitedly in agreement.Category:English terms with quotations#COUGAR
Derived terms
Translations
References
- ↑ “cougar”, in Dictionary.com Unabridged, Dictionary.com, LLC, 1995–present.
Further reading
cougar on Wikipedia.Wikipedia - “cougar n.”, in Green’s Dictionary of Slang, Jonathon Green, 2016–present.
French
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ku.ɡaʁ/Category:French 2-syllable words#COUGARCategory:French terms with IPA pronunciation#COUGAR
Category:French terms with audio pronunciation#COUGARAudio (France (Brétigny-sur-Orge)): (file)
Category:French terms with audio pronunciation#COUGARAudio (Canada (Shawinigan)): (file)
Category:French terms with audio pronunciation#COUGARAudio (France (Somain)): (file)
Noun
cougar m (plural cougars)Category:French lemmas#COUGARCategory:French nouns#COUGARCategory:French countable nouns#COUGARCategory:French entries with incorrect language header#COUGARCategory:French masculine nouns#COUGARCategory:Pages with entries#COUGARCategory:Pages with 2 entries#COUGAR
- alternative spelling of couguar (“cougar”)
Noun
cougar f (plural cougars)Category:French lemmas#COUGARCategory:French nouns#COUGARCategory:French countable nouns#COUGARCategory:French entries with incorrect language header#COUGARCategory:French feminine nouns#COUGARCategory:Pages with entries#COUGARCategory:Pages with 2 entries#COUGAR
- (informalCategory:French informal terms#COUGAR) cougar (an older woman who actively seeks the casual, often sexual, companionship of younger men)