[go: up one dir, main page]

See also: Mastodon

English

edit
 
 
molar teeth of a mastodon

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

First attested 1813, from translingual Mastodon (1806), coined by French naturalist Georges Cuvier, from masto- (breast) +‎ -odon (tooth), due to the mammilloid (“nipple-shaped”) projections on the crowns of the extinct mammal's molars.

Pronunciation

edit

Noun

edit

mastodon (plural mastodons)

  1. Extinct elephant-like mammal of the genus †Mammut that flourished worldwide from Miocene through Pleistocene times; differs from elephants and mammoths in the form of the molar teeth.
    Synonym: (archaic) incognitum
    • 2014, Elizabeth Kolbert, chapter 2, in The Sixth Extinction: An Unnatural History, Henry Holt and Company:
      When, exactly, Europeans first stumbled upon the bones of an American mastodon is unclear. An isolated molar unearthed in a field in upstate New York was sent off to London in 1705; it was labeled the “tooth of a Giant”.
  2. (figurative) Anything awkwardly large or unwieldy.
    • 2017, Nina Laurin, Girl Last Seen:
      The battery is dying, and Natalia's iPhone charger doesn't fit my mastodon of a phone anyway.
    • 2020, Finn Laursen, The Development of the EU as a Sea-Policy Actor:
      Nor does it work for governance: the policy has become such a mastodon that we can't adapt it quickly enough to different regions or different circumstances.

Derived terms

edit
edit

Translations

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ mastodon”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster, 1996–present.
  2. ^ mastodon”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present, retrieved 04 May 2022.

Further reading

edit