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单词 buffalo
释义

buffalon.1

Brit. /ˈbʌfələʊ/, /ˈbʌfl̩əʊ/, U.S. /ˈbəf(ə)ˌloʊ/
Forms: 1500s bufalo, (1600s buffolo, boufaleau, boufalo, 1600s–1700s buffelo, 1700s bufolo), 1600s– buffalo. plural buffaloes.
Etymology: < Italian buffalo (Florio), bufalo, bufolo (Baretti), or Portuguese búfalo < vulgar Latin *būfalus , < Greek βούβαλος (whence in literary Latin būbalus ), properly denoting a kind of antelope, but applied to a wild ox. Compare buffle n., buff n.2 The early quotations suggest that the word originally came into English from Portuguese.
1. The name of several species of oxen; esp.
a. Bos bubalus, originally a native of India, inhabiting most of Asia, southern Europe, and northern Africa. It is tamed in India, Italy, and elsewhere.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > subfamily Bovinae (bovine) > [noun] > Bubalus bubalis (water buffalo)
buffle?c1510
buffalo1588
water-ox1615
ante1625
buffa1710
water buffalo1827
1588 R. Parke tr. J. G. de Mendoza Hist. Kingdome of China 181 They doo plough and till their ground with kine, Bufalos, and bulles.
1665 Voy. E. India 359 They have a Beast very large, having a smooth thick skin without hair, called a Buffelo, which gives good milk; the flesh of them is like Beef.
1682 G. Wheler Journey into Greece i. 74 Drawn..instead of Flanders Mares by a pair of Boufaleaus.
1749 T. Nugent Grand Tour III. 204 They..make use of buffalo's in ploughing the land.
1842 T. B. Macaulay Battle Lake Regillus in Lays Anc. Rome 103 The drear banks of Ufens, Where..buffaloes lie wallowing Through the hot summer's day.
1851 A. H. Layard Pop. Acct. Discov. Nineveh x. 259 The cattle were..the buffalo and common ox.
b. Bos caffer, the Cape Buffalo of South Africa.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > subfamily Bovinae (bovine) > [noun] > Syncercus caffer (Cape buffalo)
buffle?c1510
buffalo1699
buffa1710
1699 Capt. Rogers in W. Dampier Voy. & Descr. iii. viii. 109 Buffaloes and Bullocks only are kept tame.
1731 G. Medley tr. P. Kolb Present State Cape Good-Hope I. 79 They could discover in them [the woods] neither Elephant nor Buffalo.
1834 T. Pringle Afr. Sketches viii. 269 The buffalo is a very..powerful animal..larger than the domestic ox.
1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. iii. 56 The presence of the buffalo..is a certain indication of water..within..seven or eight miles.
c. Applied in popular unscientific use to the American bison n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > subfamily Bovinae (bovine) > [noun] > genus Bison > Bison bison (bison)
buffalo1635
buffa1710
bison1774
boss1800
1635 Relation Maryland iii. 23 In the upper parts of the countrey there are Bufeloes, Elkes, Lions, Beares, Wolues, and Deare there are in great Store.
1705 R. Beverley Hist. Virginia ii. vi. 39 The Elks, Buffaloes, Deer and greater Game.
1743 M. Catesby Nat. Hist. Carolina (1754) II. App. p. xxvii Bison Americanus, the Bufalo.
1770 G. Washington Diaries I. 424 On this Creek many Buffaloes use, according to the Indians acc[oun]t.
1794 J. Morse Amer. Geogr. (new ed.) 151 This animal [bison] has generally been called the Buffalo, but very improperly.
1836 W. Irving Astoria (1849) 195 Boundless wastes..animated by herds of buffalo.
1877 J. A. Allen Amer. Bisons 456 Probably among the people generally the name buffalo will never be supplanted.
d. collective.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > mammals > group Ungulata (hoofed) > group Ruminantia (sheep, goats, cows, etc.) > subfamily Bovinae (bovine) > [noun] > genus Bison > Bison bison (bison) > collectively
buffalo1765
1765 G. Croghan Jrnl. (1875) 132 The country hereabouts abounds with buffalo, bears, [etc.].
1770 G. Washington Diaries I. 427 This Country abounds in Buffalo and wild game of all kinds.
1817 S. R. Brown Western Gazetteer 30 The buffaloe..have lately disappeared.
a1861 T. Winthrop John Brent xxvi. 275 We crowded through the buffalo.
1895 C. King Fort Frayne xviii. 260 A deep cleft in the foothills through which the buffalo in bygone days had made their way.
e. (With capital initial.) A member of the Royal Antediluvian Order of Buffaloes, founded in 1822 for sociable and benevolent purposes.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > secret society > [noun] > organizations similar to masons > members of organizations similar to masons
Gormogon1725
Gregorian1742
Odd Fellow1789
buffaloa1849
Good Templar1853
Rebekah1854
Inner and Outer Guardian1879
primo1879
Shriner1886
a1849 P. Egan Finish Tom & Jerry (1869) v. 120 At the Harp, in Great Russel Street, opposite Drury Lane Theatre, the Buffalo Society was first established, in August, 1822.
1879 The Buffalo 16 Jan. 3/3 Bro. Barrett, the Buffalo Bootmaker of Walworth.
1881 (title) The Buffalo Review and Lodge Reporter.
1897 Daily News 16 Mar. 8/3 A room in which certain ‘Buffaloes’ were holding a lodge meeting.
1970 Sunday Times 18 Jan. 52/3 We used to have a branch of the Buffaloes at the pub.
1970 Sunday Times 18 Jan. 52/3 Her family were very high up in the Buffaloes.
f. A leather hamper used for carrying the bobbins used in cotton-manufacture.
ΚΠ
1874 E. H. Knight Amer. Mech. Dict. I. 399/1 Buffalo,..a hamper of buffalo-leather used in a factory to convey bobbins from the throstle.
g. An amphibious tank.
ΘΚΠ
society > travel > means of travel > a conveyance > vehicle > military vehicles > [noun] > armed or armoured > tank > types of
whippet1918
cruiser tank1940
Valentine1941
General Sherman (tank)1942
Valentine tank1943
buffalo1944
flail tank1944
1944 Hutchinson's Pict. Hist. War Oct. 139 (caption) British troops were carried across the Scheldt in assault craft... This ‘Buffalo’ assault craft is carrying back some of the prisoners taken.
1945 Times 1 Mar. 4/3 The generals..rode in a ‘buffalo’ and inspected it minutely.
1959 Times Lit. Suppl. 13 Feb. 86/2 This division was also the British Army's nursery of the amphibious ‘Buffaloes’ of American origin.
2. ‘A sort of freshwater fish resembling the Sucker’ (Bartlett).
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > superorder Ostariophysi or order Cypriniformes > [noun] > suborder Cyprinoidei > family Catostomidae (suckers) > unspecified and miscellaneous types
sucker1753
jumping-mullet1767
buffalo-fish1774
buffalo1789
red horse1796
sucking carp1804
carpsucker1828
hogmolly1877
hogsucker1877
suckerel1888
hog mullet1889
1789 J. Morse Amer. Geogr. 405 In the rivers are plenty of buffalo and catfish.
1884 Harper's Mag. Mar. 516/2 The ‘buffalo’ and cat-fish..are not unfrequently as large as a man.
3. = buffalo-robe n. at Compounds 2; see sense 4. U.S. and Canadian colloquial.
ΘΚΠ
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > loose clothing > cloak, mantle, or cape > types of > made of specific material
pallOE
rug1591
matchcoat1612
abolla1700
kaross1731
buffalo-robe1804
posteen1815
korowai1820
izar1836
buffalo1840
thatch-cloak1844
parawai1847
kaitaka1882
muzhik1897
burka1898
suba1911
1840 Knickerbocker Apr. 326 Don't forgit to Put in as many Seats as you can, and All your Buffaloes.
1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xv. 181 Leaving all hands under their buffaloes.
1884 Boston (Mass.) Jrnl. 3 Sept. Asked by the groom if he would like a couple of buffaloes (robes)..‘No’, replied the scientist, ‘we would much prefer horses’.
4. Short for buffalo-horn n. at Compounds 2: used by cutlers for making handles of pocket-knives; the varieties are black buffalo and buffalo grey or coloured buffalo.

Derivatives

ˈBuffaloism n.
ΘΚΠ
society > society and the community > social relations > an association, society, or organization > secret society > [noun] > organizations similar to masons > principles or practices of
Oddfellowship1846
Good Templary1872
Buffaloism1888
1888 C. Hindley True Hist. Tom & Jerry 162 BuffsBuffaloes—and Buffaloism.—A society..established in August, 1822, by an eccentric young man of the name of Joseph Lisle, an artist, in conjunction with Mr. W. Sinnett, a comedian, to perpetuate, according to their ideas upon the subject, of that hitherto neglected ballad of We'll chase the Buffalo!
1897 Buffalo World Sept. 3/1 Buffaloism can boast an existence of 300 years at least.

Compounds

C1. General attributive.
buffalo-beat n.
ΚΠ
1805 T. M. Harris State of Ohio 179 There are found open cleared spots on the summit of hills, called ‘Buffaloe beats’ because supposed to be occasioned by the resort of those animals thither in fly time.
buffalo-beef n.
ΚΠ
1827 J. F. Cooper Prairie ix The man who denies that buffalo beef is good should scorn to eat it.
1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. (1859) 69 A good supply of buffalo-beef.
buffalo-berrying n.
ΚΠ
1887 I. Randall Ranche Life Montana 20 Two afternoons we spent in buffalo-berrying and shooting combined.
buffalo-boat n.
ΚΠ
1844 J. Gregg Commerce of Prairies I. 65 On some occasions caravans have been obliged to construct what is called a buffalo boat, which is done by stretching the hides of these animals over a frame of poles, or, what is still more common, over an empty wagon-body.
1881 A. A. Hayes New Colorado x. 138 Men being sent ahead..to fabricate ‘buffalo boats’ of hides stretched over frames of poles and empty wagon bodies.
buffalo-bush n.
ΚΠ
1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians I. 72 The buffalo bushes, which are peculiar to these northern regions, lined the banks of the river.
1889 J. S. Farmer Americanisms Buffalo-bush,..a shrub, the fruit of which is called the bull-berry.
buffalo-cart n.
ΚΠ
1901 Wide World Mag. 8 206/2 The annexed photo. represents a Philippine buffalo-cart, used for conveying women and children over the awful roads of the interior.
buffalo-cider n.
ΚΠ
1871 S. de Vere Americanisms (1872) 367 Buffalo-cider is the ludicrous name given to the liquid in the stomach of the buffalo, which the thirsty hunter drinks, when he has killed his game at a great distance from water.
buffalo coat n.
ΚΠ
1860 J. G. Holland Miss Gilbert's Career vii. 117 With whip in hand and buffalo-coat still unbuttoned.
1922 A. Brown Old Crow vii. 71 He saw Jerry Slate there..enveloped in the buffalo coat he had worn through the winter months.
buffalo dance n.
ΚΠ
1807–8 W. Irving Salmagundi xii. 302 This spot was inhabited by a race of aborigines, who..danced buffalo dances.
1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians I. 83 The head and horns of a buffalo..which he uses as a mask when called upon..to join in the buffalo dance.
buffalo-ground n.
ΚΠ
1837 W. Irving Capt. Bonneville (1895) I. 146 Their united force was not sufficient to venture on the buffalo grounds.
buffalo-hide n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > [noun] > buffalo-skin
buff-leather1574
buffalo-hide1703
buffalo-skin1732
parfleche1823
1703 London Gaz. No. 3919/4 A parcel of..Buffelo-Hides, &c.
1895 Cent. Mag. Sept. 694/1 He..was required to procure a buffalo-hide from which the hair had been removed.
buffalo-horse n.
ΚΠ
1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians I. 24 Mounted on his favorite buffalo horse (i. e. the horse amongst his whole group which is best trained to run the buffalo).
1868 Amer. Naturalist 2 215 The Indians offer a big price (a large buffalo horse) for the dog.
buffalo-hunt n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [noun] > buffalo
buffalo-hunting1775
buffalo-hunt1810
running1823
1810 Z. M. Pike Acct. Exped. Sources Mississippi App. ii. 34 Restricting (by edicts) the buffalo hunts to certain seasons.
buffalo-hunter n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > hunter > hunter of specific animal > [noun] > of buffalo
buffalo-hunter1824
runner1832
1824 A. Ross Jrnl. 28 Mar. in Oregon Hist. Soc. Quart. XIV. 376 The buffalo hunters came back today, buffalo in plenty; thirty killed.
buffalo-hunting n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > hunting > hunting specific animals > [noun] > buffalo
buffalo-hunting1775
buffalo-hunt1810
running1823
1775 W. Calk Jrnl. 10 Apr. in Filson Club Pubn. II. 36 Some of the company went over the River a bufelo hunting but found none.
buffalo-path n.
ΚΠ
1806 T. Ashe Trav. Amer. (1808) xxxvii. 305 There was no possibility of ascending them..except through buffalo-paths.
1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. (1859) 151 We continued our course by a winding buffalo-path.
buffalo-range n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > the earth > land > landscape > fertile land or place > land with vegetation > [noun] > grassland > range
range1640
buffalo-range1775
open range1853
bush-range1879
1775 J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 118 Living very scantily, even in a buffalo range, under a strict rule, lest by luxury their hearts should grow evil.
1837 W. Irving Capt. Bonneville (1895) I. 33 They had reached also a great buffalo range.
1859 R. B. Marcy Prairie Traveler v. 161 It will be a wise precaution in passing through the buffalo range, to lay in a supply of jerked meat for future exigencies.
buffalo-road n.
ΚΠ
1750 T. Walker Jrnl. Explor. 3 Apr. (1888) 44 To the Eastward are many small Mountains, and a Buffaloe Road between them and the Ridge.
1832 Louisville Directory 106 There would be found about a certain distance and course from a well known buffalo road a beech tree.
1849 J. Pritts Mirror Border Life 434 It was about one hundred yards from a large buffalo road.
buffalo-skin n.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > skin or hide > [noun] > buffalo-skin
buff-leather1574
buffalo-hide1703
buffalo-skin1732
parfleche1823
1732 S.C. Gaz. 25/1 Preparing Buffelo, Deer, Sheep, Goat or Kid-Skins in Oil.
buffalo-stamp n.
ΚΠ
1878 J. H. Beadle Western Wilds ix. 131 The surface..is largely dotted with ‘buffalo stamps’. These are said to have been caused by buffaloes..stamping and licking the ground.
buffalo-street n.
ΚΠ
1837 R. M. Bird Nick of Woods I. 38 You've as..broad a trace before you as man and beast could make..a buffalo-street through the canes.
buffalo-trace n.
ΚΠ
1832 Louisville Directory 106 The party..turned off the road some 300 yards about west of the buffalo trace.
1887 Harper's Mag. June 48/1 A broad smooth turnpike that has replaced the ancient buffalo trace.
buffalo track n.
ΚΠ
1835 W. Irving Tour on Prairies 145 We passed..a buffalo track, not above three days old.
buffalo-trail n.
ΚΠ
1841 G. Catlin Lett. N. Amer. Indians II. 18 We will take that buffalo trail, where the travelling herds have slashed down the high grass.
1878 J. H. Beadle Western Wilds iv. 66 We descended through a side gorge into the canon of the Cimarron, winding along a buffalo trail.
buffalo-wallow n.
ΚΠ
1843 J. C. Frémont Exped. 21 In the buffalo..wallows, I remarked saline efflorescences.
1875 Fur, Fin & Feather 109 We made a little fire in an old buffalo wallow.
1901 S. E. White Westerners vii. 46 Drinking muddy water from buffalo wallows which providential rains had filled.
buffalo-wolf n.
ΚΠ
1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. (1859) 79 The big white, or buffalo wolf.
C2.
buffalo-bag n. (cf. buffalo-robe n.).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > equipment > receptacle or container > bag > [noun] > skin
bladder?c1225
bulgec1230
bouge1387
budget1432
bulgetc1550
paidle1568
catskin1599
budge1606
petaca1648
taureau1794
buffalo-bag1856
mochila1856
parfleche1867
skin bag1910
1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xvi. 192 Two large buffalo-bags, each made of four skins.
buffalo-bean n. a milk vetch of the western United States, Astragalus crassicarpus.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > leguminous plants > [noun] > milk-vetch
astragalus1548
sea trefoil1548
sea trifoly1548
milk-vetch1597
liquorice vetch1640
prairie pea1848
sweet milk-vetch1860
buffalo-bean1906
1906 P. A. Rydberg Flora of Colorado 202 Geoprumnon... Buffalo Beans, Ground Plums.
1922 Chambers's Jrnl. 219/1 I..became acquainted with a creeping plant that grows a bean... I have since heard it called buffalo-bean.
buffalo-berry n. the edible scarlet fruit of a shrub ( Shepherdia argentea) found on the Upper Missouri; also the shrub itself.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > berry > [noun] > soapberry or buffalo berry
buffalo-berry1805
bulberry1841
soapberry1904
soapolallie1937
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular types of fruit > [noun] > edible berries > soapberry
rabbit berry1804
buffalo-berry1805
bulberry1841
soapberry1904
1805 Massachusetts Spy 17 July 2/3 Scions of a newly discovered berry, called the buffaloe berry.
1846 R. B. Sage Scenes Rocky Mts. (1859) 257 Buffalo-berry... This berry is about the size of and similar in shape to the common currant, there are three kinds, the white, yellow, and red.
1856 Gardeners' Chron. 174 The felicity of tasting real Buffalo-berries.
buffalo-bird n. an insessorial bird ( Textor erythrorhynchus) which accompanies herds of buffaloes in South Africa.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > birds > order Passeriformes (singing) > larger song birds > [noun] > family Sturnidae > genus Buphagus (ox-pecker)
rhinoceros bird1822
beefeater1836
oxpecker1837
tick-bird1850
buffalo-bird1857
ox-biter1885
tick-eater1903
cow-picker1915
1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. xxvii. 545 Buffalo-birds act the part of guardian spirits to the animals.
1857 D. Livingstone Missionary Trav. S. Afr. (1861) 357 The leader of the herd was an old cow, carrying on her withers about twenty buffalo-birds.
buffalo-chips n. plural the dried dung of the American bison, used as fuel.
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > fuel > other organic fuels > [noun] > dung
casard1499
casing1516
sharny-peat1808
dung cake1824
buffalo-chips1840
mist1852
argol1856
prairie coal1889
cattle chips1903
squaw wood1914
1840 Daily Picayune (New Orleans) 11 Oct. 2 We raised an extensive cloud of smoke from burning ‘buffalo chips’ to keep off the musquitos.
1859 R. B. Marcy Prairie Traveler 268 Buffalo-chips for fuel.
1903 S. E. White Forest iv. 35 I once slept..before a fire of dried buffalo chips and mesquite.
buffalo-clover n. a species of clover ( Trifolium pennsylvanicum) found in the prairies of North America.
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > according to family > leguminous plants > [noun] > clover or trefoil
white clovereOE
cloverc1000
hare-foota1300
clerewort?a1400
clover-grassa1400
three-leaved grass14..
trefoilc1400
sucklingc1440
four-leaved grassc1450
trefle1510
Trifolium?1541
trinity grass1545
Dutch1548
lote1548
hare's-foot1562
lotus1562
triple grass1562
blain-grass1570
meadow trefoil1578
purple grass1597
purplewort1597
satin flower1597
cithyse1620
true-love grass?a1629
garden balsam1633
hop-clover1679
Burgundian hay1712
strawberry trefoil1731
honeysuckle trefoil1735
red clover1764
buffalo-clover1767
marl-grass1776
purple trefoil1785
white trefoil1785
yellow trefoil1785
sulla1787
cow-grass1789
strawberry-bearing trefoil1796
zigzag trefoil1796
rabbit's foot1817
lotus grass1820
strawberry-headed trefoil1822
mountain liquorice1836
hop-trefoil1855
clustered clover1858
alsike1881
mountain clover1882
knop1897
Swedish clover1908
sub clover1920
four-leaf clover1927
suckle-
1767 in N. Carolina Col. Rec. VII. 1007 Buffalow Clover was extremely thick here.
1785 G. Washington Diaries II. 426 Also sowed about a tablespoonful of the Buffalo or Kentucke Clover.
1788 M. Cutler Let. 12 Nov. in W. P. Cutler & J. P. Cutler Life, Jrnls. & Corr. M. Cutler (1888) I. 285 I likewise wish particularly to know what you find the May-apple, Rich-weed, and Buffalo Clover to be.
1835 J. H. Ingraham South-West II. 88 The white clover of Kentucky, known by the name of Buffalo clover.
buffalo-fish n. = sense 2.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > fish > class Osteichthyes or Teleostomi > order Salmoniformes (salmon or trout) > superorder Ostariophysi or order Cypriniformes > [noun] > suborder Cyprinoidei > family Catostomidae (suckers) > unspecified and miscellaneous types
sucker1753
jumping-mullet1767
buffalo-fish1774
buffalo1789
red horse1796
sucking carp1804
carpsucker1828
hogmolly1877
hogsucker1877
suckerel1888
hog mullet1889
1774 D. Jones Jrnl. (1865) 111 Another kind of fish called buffaloe fish, many of which are larger than our sheepshead.
1784 J. Filson Discov. Kentucke 26 The fish common to the waters of Ohio are the buffalo-fish, of a large size, and the catfish.
1861 Russell in Times 10 July These..rivers are very fine for..buffalo fish to live in.
buffalo fly n. a small biting insect of the genus Simulium.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Nematocera > family Simuliidae > member of genus Simulium
blackfly1776
gnat1787
buffalo gnat1822
buffalo fly1849
kabouri1899
turkey-gnat1899
simulium1902
1849 C. Lyell 2nd Visit U.S. II. 89 There were swarms of buffalo flies to torment his horses, and sand flies to sting him and his family.
1932 Discovery July 210/2 The buffalo fly is another extremely serious pest, in this case of the cattle industry.
buffalo gnat n.
ΘΚΠ
the world > animals > invertebrates > phylum Arthropoda > class Insecta > order Diptera or flies > [noun] > suborder Nematocera > family Simuliidae > member of genus Simulium
blackfly1776
gnat1787
buffalo gnat1822
buffalo fly1849
kabouri1899
turkey-gnat1899
simulium1902
1822 J. Woods Two Years' Resid. Eng. Prairie 278 We had no buffalo gnats.
1837 W. Irving Capt. Bonneville (1895) I. 32 Excessively annoyed by musquitos and buffalo gnats.
1904 Westm. Gaz. 11 Aug. 8/1 The minute black fly of the Mississippi Valley, commonly known as the buffalo-gnat, from a fancied resemblance in outline to the buffalo.
1959 J. Clegg Freshwater Life Brit. Isles (ed. 2) xiv. 235 The Black-flies..under such names as Buffalo Gnats..are only too well known as pests of cattle.
buffalo grass n. (a) a kind of grass ( Buchloë dactyloides) found in the prairies; also used generally (see quot. 1950); (b) any of various African grasses used for pasture and fodder; (c) Australian and New Zealand, the grass Stenotaphrum americanum, introduced from the United States, and first noticed near Buffalo Creek in New South Wales (Webster 1911).
ΘΚΠ
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > non-British grasses > [noun] > Australian grasses
silver grass1600
buffalo grass1784
cane grass1827
porcupine grass1842
tussock-grass1842
spinifex1846
spear-grass1847
rice grass1848
sugar-grass1862
blue star grass1876
wiregrass1883
windmill-grass1889
danthonia1918
Wimmera rye-grass1920
niggerhead1923
the world > plants > particular plants > plants and herbs > a grass or grasses > non-British grasses > [noun] > North American
salt grass1704
wiregrass1751
Indian grass1765
buffalo grass1784
blue-eyed grass1785
mountain rice1790
nimble Will1816
yard-grass1822
mesquite1831
poverty-grass1832
tickle-moth1833
bunch-grass1837
naked-beard grass1848
needle grass1848
Means grass1858
toothache-grass1860
Johnson grass1873
Indian rice grass1893
nigger babies1897
St. Augustine grass1905
pinyon ricegrass1935
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > particular food plant or plant product > particular fodder plants > [noun] > grasses used for hay or pasture
windlestrawc1000
red grass1582
spring grass1643
sweet-grass1709
herd-grass1747
Guinea grass1756
vernal grass1762
vernal1771
Paspalum1772
buffalo grass1784
Rhode Island bent1790
red-top1792
finetop1824
kangaroo-grass1827
gamagrass1831
sweet vernal grass1839
yellow-top1839
grama1844
sesame grass1845
sacate1848
Para grass1850
Hungarian1859
alfilaria1860
sacaton1865
Mitchell grass1867
teosinte1877
Landsborough grass1883
turnip-grass1889
brown top1891
ichu1891
manna1897
Rhodes grass1903
Sudan1911
Kikuyu grass1913
never-fail1923
buffel grass1955
1784 J. Filson Discov. Kentucke 24 Where no cane grows there is abundance of wild-rye, clover, and buffalo-grass,..affording excellent food for cattle.
1831 J. M. Peck Guide for Emigrants ii. 105 Horses find..buffalo grass..and other herbage for the summer range.
1845 J. C. Frémont Exped. 109 The short sward of the buffalo grass which now prevailed everywhere.
1868 J. Chapman Trav. Interior S. Afr. II. 457 The Buffalo grass has a large, broad, corrugated leaf and is greedily eaten by horses and cattle.
1870 Amer. Naturalist 3 162 The Buffalo grass..does not grow more than three or four inches high.
1876 F. M. Bailey in Papers & Proc. Royal Soc. Tasmania 1875 132 The Buffalo grass, Stenotaphrum Americanum..is a very fine and desirable species.
1883 Harper's Mag. Nov. 943/2 The tall jointed grasses replace the short crisp buffalo-grass.
1950 Amer. Speech 25 164 The ground is covered with ‘buffalo grass’, which once designated a specific type but now means any tough grass that grows on the poor soil of the plains.
buffalo-horn n. (a) the horn of a buffalo; (b) an African tree, Zizyphus mucronata; (c) U.S. (see quot. 18872).
ΘΚΠ
society > occupation and work > materials > raw material > bone or horn > [noun] > horn > types of
unicorna1533
devil's horn1583
ram's horn1611
greenhorn1725
buffalo-horn1783
stag-horn1815
buck-horn1820
deer-horn1843
devil horn1854
antler1872
rhino horn1889
the world > plants > particular plants > trees and shrubs > non-British trees or shrubs > African trees or shrubs > [noun] > other African trees or shrubs
keurboom1731
silver-tree1731
witteboom1799
Hottentot's bean1801
melkhouta1823
monkey apple1824
witgatboom1824
Hottentot's bean tree1833
spek-boom1834
mopane1854
Welwitschia1862
ambatch1863
miombo1864
pith tree1864
porkwood1875
tree purslane1882
buffalo-horn1887
monkey guava1887
bush willow1917
melkboom1917
msasa1923
rooibos1932
miraa1945
ovangkol1972
pigeon wood1972
tambotie1973
the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > hill or mountain > [noun] > summit > serrated
buffalo-horn1887
1783 W. Fleming in N. D. Mereness Trav. Amer. Col. (1916) 665 We picked up..a petrified Buffalo horn.
1887 C. A. Moloney Sketch Forestry W. Afr. 300Buffalo-Horn’ (Zizyphus mucronata, Willd.).
1887 Scribner's Mag. 2 507 The latter fixes his attention on the saw-like, serrated crowns, or summits, which are..typical..of true mountainous form. There are plenty of such features in the Rocky Mountains, and natives call them ‘buffalo-horns’.
buffalo-jack n. the Caranx pisquetos (also called simply jack: see Jack n.2 35c).
buffalo-nut n. the fruit of a North American shrub ( Pyrularia oleifera), also called Oil-nut; also the shrub itself.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > food > fruit and vegetables > fruit or a fruit > nut > [noun] > other nuts
mani1604
nuciprune1682
breadnut?1740
buckeye1785
mockernut1804
breadnut1828
philopena1839
nutlet1848
Barcelona nut1851
buffalo-nut1857
urucuri1860
Queensland nut1870
the world > plants > particular plants > cultivated or valued plants > plant, nut, or bean yielding oil > [noun] > trees or shrubs yielding oil > North American > buffalo-nut or tree
buffalo-nut1857
oil-nut1884
1857 A. Gray First Lessons Bot. 382 Buffalo-nut..[is] a low straggling shrub, with..small greenish flowers.
1859 J. R. Bartlett Dict. Americanisms (ed. 2) Buffalo nut (Pyrularia oleifera), oil nut. Western.
buffalo-perch n. (a) the freshwater drum, Haplodinotus grunniens, family Sciænidæ (see drum n.1 6); (b) a buffalo-fish, Ictiobus bubalus, family Catostomidæ (see 2, Compounds 1).
buffalo-robe n. a cloak or rug made of the skin of the American bison dressed with the hair on.
ΘΚΠ
society > inhabiting and dwelling > inhabited place > a building > furniture and fittings > floor-covering > [noun] > rug > types of, generally
shag1634
hearthrug1790
buffalo-robe1804
hooked rug1880
area rug1941
hook rug1951
the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > [noun] > loose clothing > cloak, mantle, or cape > types of > made of specific material
pallOE
rug1591
matchcoat1612
abolla1700
kaross1731
buffalo-robe1804
posteen1815
korowai1820
izar1836
buffalo1840
thatch-cloak1844
parawai1847
kaitaka1882
muzhik1897
burka1898
suba1911
1804 W. Clark Jrnl. 30 Aug. in Jrnls. Lewis & Clark Exped. (1987) III. 24 The Squars wore Peticoats & a white Buffalow roabes with the black hair turned back over their necks and Sholders.
1806 Z. M. Pike Sources Mississippi 9 Feb. 68 The rider wraps himself up in a buffalo robe,..having a cushion to lean his back against.
1845 J. C. Frémont Exped. 145 It is only within a very recent period that they have received buffalo robes in trade.
1856 E. K. Kane Arctic Explor. I. xvi. 193 The sick..were placed upon the bed of buffalo-robes.
1869 S. Bowles Our New West v. 100 My bedding..consisted of two pairs of heavy blankets, a buffalo robe, a rubber blanket and a pillow.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1888; most recently modified version published online March 2022).

Buffalon.2

Brit. /ˈbʌfələʊ/, U.S. /ˈbəf(ə)ˌloʊ/
Forms: also with lower-case initial.
Origin: From a proper name. Etymon: proper name Buffalo.
Etymology: < Buffalo, the name of a city in New York State, where the recipe was developed in 1964 at the Anchor Bar.
Cookery (originally and chiefly U.S.).
attributive. Designating a chicken wing deep fried and coated in a spicy sauce; esp. in Buffalo chicken wing, Buffalo wing.
ΚΠ
1980 C. Trillin in New Yorker 25 Aug. 84/1 The invention of the Buffalo chicken wing came about because of..the delivery of some chicken wings instead of the backs and necks that were ordinarily used in making spaghetti sauce.
1989 Washington Post 6 Sept. a3 At Frank and Teressa's Anchor Bar, where Buffalo chicken wings were invented as bar snacks in 1964, owner Dominic Bellissimo sells 67,000 pounds of spicy wings each month.
1995 Brew Mar. 19/2 In keeping with the ‘hot and spicy’ craze going on in this country right now, the menu offers appetizers such as deep-fried green chili peppers and buffalo wings coated with Louisiana hot sauce.
2002 Philadelphia Inquirer Mag. 22 Dec. 23/3 I even loved the high-class take on Buffalo wings, which opted for meaty drumstick ‘lollipops’ and a killer sauce with vinegar and spice.
This is a new entry (OED Third Edition, March 2004; most recently modified version published online December 2021).

buffalov.

Etymology: < buffalo n.1Previous versions of the OED give the stress as: ˈbuffalo.
North American slang.
transitive. To overpower, overawe, or constrain by superior force or influence; to outwit, perplex.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > belief > uncertainty, doubt, hesitation > perplexity, bewilderment > act of perplexing > confuse, perplex, bewilder [verb (transitive)] > nonplus
stagger1556
gravel1566
set1577
trump1586
bumbaze1587
puzzlec1595
ground1597
stunt1603
nonplus1605
pose1605
stumble1605
buzzard1624
quandary1681
bamboozle1712
hobble1762
stump1807
have1816
floor1830
flummox1837
stick1851
get1868
to stick up1897
buffalo1903
1903 Cincinnati Enquirer 9 May 13/1 Buffaloed—Bluffed.
1904 N.Y. Evening Post 25 Oct. 10 All the rest [of the newspapers] were what we used to term in the Southwest ‘buffaloed’ by the McKinley myth—that is, silenced by the fear of incurring the resentment of a people taught to regard McKinley as a saint.
1910 W. M. Raine Bucky O'Connor 77 O'Connor admitted that he was ‘buffaloed’ when he attempted an analysis of his unusual feeling.
1913 C. E. Mulford Coming of Cassidy xiii. 214 It ain't his fault that Waffles buffaloed you fellers out of th' Hills, is it?
1920 E. W. Bok Americanization of Edward Bok (1921) 321 That fellow Bok certainly has the women buffaloed for good.
1947 E. A. McCourt Flaming Hour 118 Jerry Potts himself would have been buffaloed.

Derivatives

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ˈbuffaloed adj.
This entry has not yet been fully updated (first published 1933; most recently modified version published online June 2019).
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