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单词 hunting
释义

hunting


hunt·ing

H0328900 (hŭn′tĭng)n.1. The activity or sport of pursuing game.2. The act of conducting a search for something: house hunting.3. Electronics The periodic variation in speed of a synchronous motor with respect to the current.

hunting

(ˈhʌntɪŋ) n (Hunting) a. the pursuit and killing or capture of game and wild animals, regarded as a sportb. (as modifier): hunting boots; hunting lodge.

hunt•ing

(ˈhʌn tɪŋ)

n. 1. the act of a person, animal, or thing that hunts. 2. the periodic oscillating of a rotating electromechanical system about a mean space position, as in a synchronous motor. adj. 3. of, for, or engaged in hunting: a hunting cap. [before 950]

hunting

  • park - Originally a legal term for land held by royal grant for the keeping of game animals for royals to hunt.
  • sealer, sealing - A sealer is a seal hunter and seal hunting is called sealing.
  • half-cocked - Comes from hunting; a gun at half cock is in the safety position—so it came to mean "incompletely prepared."
  • tryst - Comes from Scottish as a variant of an old word, trist, "an appointed place or station in hunting," and now means a "secret meeting of lovers."

Hunting


cynegeticsthe sport of hunting. — cynegetic, adj.falconry1. the sport of hunting with falcons or other trained birds of prey.
2. the training of birds of prey.
venationArchaic. the sport or occupation of hunting. — venatic, venatical, venational, adj.venery1. Archaic. the sport, practice, or art of hunting or the chase.
2. the animals that are hunted.

hunting

– shooting">shooting

In American English, hunting is the killing of wild animals or birds as a sport or for food, using guns.

...the shotgun the President used when he went deer hunting.

In British English, hunting usually refers to the chasing and killing of foxes by dogs, followed by people on horseback. The killing of animals and birds with guns is referred to in British English as shooting.

For hunting with hounds was voted illegal in Scotland.Grouse shooting begins in August.
Thesaurus
Noun1.hunting - the pursuit and killing or capture of wild animals regarded as a sporthunting - the pursuit and killing or capture of wild animals regarded as a sporthuntfield sport, outdoor sport - a sport that is played outdoorsblood sport - sport that involves killing animals (especially hunting)battue - a hunt in which beaters force the game to flee in the direction of the hunterbeagling - hunting rabbits with beaglescoursing - hunting with dogs (usually greyhounds) that are trained to chase game (such as hares) by sight instead of by scentdeer hunt, deer hunting - hunting deerduck hunting, ducking - hunting ducksfox hunting, foxhunt - mounted hunters follow hounds in pursuit of a foxpigsticking - the sport of hunting wild boar with spearsbag - capture or kill, as in hunting; "bag a few pheasants"batfowl - catch birds by temporarily blinding themsnare, trammel, trap, ensnare, entrap - catch in or as if in a trap; "The men trap foxes"gin - trap with a snare; "gin game"
2.hunting - the activity of looking thoroughly in order to find something or someonehunting - the activity of looking thoroughly in order to find something or someonesearch, huntactivity - any specific behavior; "they avoided all recreational activity"exploration - a careful systematic searchforaging, forage - the act of searching for food and provisionsfrisk, frisking - the act of searching someone for concealed weapons or illegal drugs; "he gave the suspect a quick frisk"looking for, looking - the act of searching visuallymanhunt - an organized search (by police) for a person (charged with a crime)seeking, quest - the act of searching for something; "a quest for diamonds"ransacking, rummage - a thorough search for something (often causing disorder or confusion); "he gave the attic a good rummage but couldn't find his skis"scouring - moving over territory to search for something; "scouring the entire area revealed nothing"shakedown - a very thorough search of a person or a place; "a shakedown by the police uncovered the drugs"
3.hunting - the work of finding and killing or capturing animals for food or peltshuntcanned hunt - a hunt for animals that have been raised on game ranches until they are mature enough to be killed for trophy collectionstoil, labor, labour - productive work (especially physical work done for wages); "his labor did not require a great deal of skill"stalking, still hunt, stalk - a hunt for game carried on by following it stealthily or waiting in ambushbirdnesting - hunting for birds' nests to get the eggspredation - the act of preying by a predator who kills and eats the prey

hunting

noun blood sports, coursing, stalking, field sports referendums whether or not to ban hunting in the countryQuotations
"The English country gentleman galloping after a fox - the unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable" [Oscar Wilde]
Translations
打猎

hunt

(hant) verb1. to chase (animals etc) for food or for sport. He spent the whole day hunting (deer). 獵捕 追猎2. to pursue or drive out. The murderer was hunted from town to town. 追捕,驅趕 穷追,驱赶 noun1. the act of hunting animals etc. a tiger hunt. 狩獵 打猎2. a search. I'll have a hunt for that lost necklace. 搜尋 搜寻ˈhunterfeminine ˈhuntress noun a person who hunts. 獵人 猎人ˈhunting noun the activity of chasing animals etc for food or for sport. 狩獵 打猎ˈhuntsman (ˈhants-) noun a hunter. 獵人 猎人hunt down to search for (someone or something) until found. The police hunted down the escaped prisoner. 持續搜尋(某人或某物)直到找到 搜索直至找到(某物) hunt for to search for. I've been hunting for that shoe all morning. 搜尋 搜寻hunt high and low to search everywhere. 四處搜索 到处搜索hunt out to search for (something that has been put away) until it is found. I'll hunt out that old photograph for you. 尋找(存放的某物)直到找到 努力找出,搜寻出

hunting

打猎zhCN

hunting


happy hunting ground

A utopia. Used by Native Americans to describe the afterlife. The annual car swap meet is a happy hunting ground for automotive enthusiasts.See also: ground, happy, hunting

hunt high and low (for someone or something)

To look absolutely everywhere for someone or something. We've been hunting high and low for an apartment we can afford, but the housing market in this town is atrocious. I hunted high and low, but I couldn't find my passport anywhere.See also: and, high, hunt, low, someone

run with the hare and hunt with the hounds

1. To support or attempt to placate both sides of a conflict or dispute. Many have criticized the government of running with the hare and hunting with the hounds regarding the territorial dispute between the two nations.2. To act duplicitously or hypocritically; to speak or act out against something while engaging or taking part in it. How can you be taken seriously as a reformer when you have continued to accept gifts? You can't run with the hare and hunt with the hounds, Senator.See also: and, hare, hound, hunt, run

hunt down

1. To pursue and find someone or something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hunt" and "down." The police have vowed to hunt down the perpetrators of this crime. If you hurt my daughter, I'll hunt you down, you hear me?2. To search for someone or something. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hunt" and "down." I'm trying to hunt down an extra cookie pan, but I've been unsuccessful so far.See also: down, hunt

headhunt

To recruit employees for a business or corporation. Yes, I'm currently headhunting, but none of the candidates I've interviewed so far has wowed me.

hunt after (someone or something)

To search or look for someone or something. Please try not to worry too much—the police are hunting after the suspect right now. A: "Hey, I'm hunting after some wrapping paper." B: "Oh, that's in the drawer over here."See also: after, hunt

hunt for (someone or something)

1. To engage in the sport of hunting. Last I heard, they were going out to hunt for quail.2. To search for someone or something. I'm hunting for an extra cookie pan, but I can't find a thing in all this mess!See also: hunt

hunt out

To search for and locate someone or something that is hidden. A noun or pronoun can be used between "hunt" and "out." Thanks to your description of his physical appearance, the police were able to hunt out the suspect. Good luck hunting an extra cookie pan out in all this mess!See also: hunt, out

hunt through (something) (for something)

To dig or rummage aimlessly in or through some cluttered place or collection of things in order to find something. I caught my brother hunting through my purse again. A raccoon was hunting through the dumpster for something to eat. We spent the whole afternoon hunting through old photographs of Granny Mary, picking the best ones for her memorial service.See also: hunt, through

hunt someone or something down

 1. to chase and catch someone or something. I don't know where Amy is, but I'll hunt her down. I'll find her. I will hunt down the villain. 2. to locate someone or something. I don't have a big enough gasket. I'll have to hunt one down. I have to hunt down a good dentist.See also: down, hunt

hunt someone or something out

to find someone or something even if concealed. We will hunt them all out and find every last one of those guys. We will hunt out all of them. They hunted out the murderer.See also: hunt, out

in quest of someone or something

 and in search of someone or somethingseeking or hunting something; trying to find something. They went into town in quest of a reasonably priced restaurant. Monday morning I'll go out in search of a job.See also: of, quest

run with the hare and hunt with the hounds

Fig. to support both sides of a dispute. In our office politics, Sally always tries to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds, telling both the clerical workers and the management that she thinks they should prevail.See also: and, hare, hound, hunt, run

happy hunting ground

A place where one can find or do what one wishes without restriction. For example, The North Shore is a happy hunting ground for antique collectors. This term alludes to the Native American idea of an afterlife where hunters find unlimited game. [Early 1800s] See also: ground, happy, hunting

run with the hare and hunt with the hounds

BRITISH, LITERARYIf someone runs with the hare and hunts with the hounds, they try to support both sides in an argument or fight. They want to keep the peace and have everybody happy. For this reason they learn very quickly to run with the hares and hunt with the hounds. Note: A hound is a dog that has been bred for hunting. See also: and, hare, hound, hunt, run

happy hunting ground

a place where success or enjoyment is obtained. This phrase originally referred to the optimistic hope of Native Americans that the afterlife will be spent in a country where there are good hunting grounds. 1991 Antique Collector With Old Master drawings still considered an undervalued genre, this should prove a happy hunting ground for those in search of a bargain. See also: ground, happy, hunting

run with the hare and hunt with the hounds

try to remain on good terms with both sides in a conflict or dispute. British This expression has been in use since the mid 15th century.See also: and, hare, hound, hunt, run

a happy ˈhunting ground

(humorous) a very good place to find what you want: The Sunday antique market is a happy hunting ground for collectors.See also: ground, happy, hunting

run with the ˌhare and hunt with the ˈhounds

try to remain friendly with both sides in a quarrel: I know you want to keep everyone happy, but I’m afraid you can’t run with the hare and hunt with the hounds on this issue.See also: and, hare, hound, hunt, run

hunt down

v.1. To pursue, track, or search for something or someone: The panther hunted down the deer. The police hunted the kidnappers down.2. To find something or someone after a long or difficult search: I hunted down my watch—it was at the bottom of my sock drawer. After two weeks, the detectives finally hunted the suspect down.See also: down, hunt

happy hunting ground

Heaven; a place of abundance, replete with what one wants. The idea comes from the beliefs of Native American tribes that after death they will go to a paradise with an abundance of game and therefore always have enough to eat. The term appears in the works of James Fenimore Cooper and other writers on Indian subjects. As Cooper wrote in The Pathfinder (1840), “‘Do the dead of the savages ever walk?’ demanded Cap. ‘Ay, and run, too, in their happy hunting grounds.’” Later the term became a euphemism for death, and still later it was transferred to any place of abundant treasures.See also: ground, happy, hunting

hunting


hunting,

act of seeking, following, and killing wild animals for consumption or display. It differs from fishingfishing,
act of catching fish for consumption or display. Fishing—usually by hand, club, spear, net, and (at least as early as 23,000 years ago) by hook—was known to prehistoric people.
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 in that it involves only land animals. Hunting was a necessary activity of early humans. Through the Paleolithic period it was their chief means of obtaining food and clothing. In the Neolithic period, when agriculture developed, killing game was still important. Hunting was popular among the ancients and became a sport in medieval Europe, where it was reserved, as far as possible, for the privileged classes by game lawsgame laws,
restrictions on the hunting or capture of wild game, whether bird, beast, or fish. After the Norman Conquest (1066), England enacted stringent game laws, known as the Forest Laws, which made hunting the sole privilege of the king and his nobles.
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. Falconryfalconry
, sport of hunting birds or small animals with falcons or other types of hawks; eagles are used in some parts of the world. It was known to the ancient Chinese, Persians, and Egyptians. Falconry probably spread from Asia to Eastern Europe and then to Western Europe.
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 and foxhunting became increasingly popular in England in the Middle Ages, and the use of hunting dogs—hounds, setters, pointers, spaniels, and the like—became widespread in this period. Hunting can be divided into three branches, each of which is defined by the type of instrument used by the hunter. Hunting with weapons (now primarily firearms, formerly bow and arrowbow and arrow,
weapon consisting of two parts; the bow is made of a strip of flexible material, such as wood, with a cord linking the two ends of the strip to form a tension from which is propelled the arrow; the arrow is a straight shaft with a sharp point on one end and
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, boomerangboomerang
, special form of throwing stick, used mainly by the aborigines of Australia. Other forms of throwing sticks were used by the peoples of ancient Egypt, Ethiopia, and India and by the indigenous peoples of the SW United States.
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, spear, or sling) is probably the most popular, especially in the United States. Trappingtrapping,
most broadly, the use of mechanical or deceptive devices to capture, kill, or injure animals. It may be applied to the practice of using birdlime to capture birds, lobster pots to trap lobsters, and seines to catch fish.
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 and snaring with deceptive implements is popular in northern areas. In coursing (with dogs) and falconry (with hawks) hunters enlist the aid of trained animals. Coursing is especially popular in Britain and Western Europe. Types of hunting are also distinguished by the size of the animal being sought. Big-game hunting is the most glamorous and often the most dangerous. It became a popular sport among Western colonialists in Africa and India during the 19th cent., and even today the big-game safari survives. Big-game animals include, or have included, the moose, caribou, bear, and elk of North America; the reindeer, elk, and wolf of Europe; the tiger, leopard, elephant, and wild goat of Asia; and the antelope, gazelle, zebra, leopard, lion, giraffe, rhinoceros, and elephant of Africa. Small-game hunting, known as "shooting" in Great Britain, focuses on birds such as the quail, partridge, grouse, pheasant, and goose, as well as on such animals as the hare, rabbit, woodchuck, raccoon, and squirrel. Extensive hunting, both commercial and recreational, has made many species of game animals extinct (the passenger pigeon) or nearly extinct (the American bison). Game laws and wildlife refugeswildlife refuge,
haven or sanctuary for animals; an area of land or of land and water set aside and maintained, usually by government or private organization, for the preservation and protection of one or more species of wildlife. Types of Refuges

The U.S.
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 in the United States have been designed to save game animals and birds from extinction. Many African nations have also instituted such measures, but illegal poaching for furs, skins, ivory, internal organs, and the like remains a problem both there and in other areas of the world.

Hunting

 

(electrical machinery), any periodic deviation in operating performance from the established state.

The most typical form of hunting is variation in the rate of rotation of the shaft in synchronous electrical machines brought about by a sudden change in the load on the shaft or in the parameters in the external electrical network (the disconnection or connection of parts of the network, short circuits in the line, improper connection of a generator to the network during its synchronization). For example, when a rapid change in torque occurs on the shaft of a motor, the rotor alters its angular position, with a certain angular acceleration, in order to reestablish the disturbed equilibrium. When synchronism has been achieved, the rotor, with its extra accumulation of kinetic energy, continues to increase its angular velocity, so that synchronism is again disturbed. As a result of the hunting, the shaft of the electrical machine oscillates mechanically, leading possibly to a disruption of the normal operation of the equipment.

REFERENCE

Petrov, G. N. Elektricheskie mashiny, parts 1–3. Moscow-Leningrad, 1956–68.

Hunting

 

the taking of wild animals and birds; one of the most ancient human economic activities. Hunting has been known to almost all peoples. Initially, in the Lower Paleolithic, it was predominantly a collective endeavor. Even the prey was eaten collectively. Hunting was usually combined with food-gathering and fishing and, later, with land cultivation and cattle raising. As civilization advanced and hunting weapons were improved, a particular form of hunting developed, which, mainly in northern latitudes, gradually evolved into commercial hunting.

The earliest hunting weapons were stones, stone axes, clubs, darts, and spears. Later weapons included spikes, spears, daggers, knives, nets, unattended traps, and pitfalls. Of particular significance in the development of hunting was the invention during the Mesolithic of the bow, which remained the principal hunting weapon for most peoples until the appearance of firearms. The dog was first used in hunting during the Neolithic; later, the bait-deer, horses, and hunting birds were used. Weaponry, which determined hunting methods, changed quite slowly. Hunting cultures developed over time, as traditions were handed down from generation to generation. For example, in the Far North in the first millennium B.C., traditional methods were established for harpooning marine animals from boats, from the shore, or on the ice. Hunting with dogs or unattended traps was widespread in the tundra and the taiga. Hunting on horseback with hunting birds and sight hounds was characteristic of Asiatic nomads. In North and South America, after the importation of horses there by Europeans in the 15th century, mounted hunting of bison, guanacos, and other animals developed. Hunting with the lasso and missiles (bola, throwing spear [sulitsa]) was common in the steppe zones of America, Asia (Middle East, India), and Europe (Black Sea region). The blowgun was used in some regions of Indonesia and South America. Bow hunting and spear hunting predominated in tropical forest regions. Australians hunted with darts and the boomerang. With the appearance of firearms in the 12th century (first among the Arabs), the rifle gradually became the principal hunting weapon.

Most widely used in modern hunting are rifles (usually in combination with hunting dogs) and such unattended trapping devices as spring traps, wooden traps, nets, and box traps. Less frequently, such trapping animals as sight hounds, terriers, cheetahs, and hunting birds are used. Baits and lures (meat, fish, nuts, berries, aromatic substances) and imitations of the calls of animals and birds are used to attract the game to an area selected by the hunter or into set traps.

There are various methods of hunting. Rifle hunting, which makes use of hunting dogs, including laikas, scent hounds, sight hounds, setters, pointers, and terriers, is used in pursuit of the majority of furbearers, ungulates, and forest and aquatic birds. The hunters sometimes flush the game from hiding by frightening it with a shot. An animal’s tracks may be followed on the snow, or its burrows, feeding sites, and watering places may be observed. An animal may be enticed toward an artificial or a live bird (duck, goose). Some animals are called by imitation of a mating invitation. Burrow-dwelling animals may be flushed from their habitats by terriers (fox terriers, dachshunds), smoke, or water. A battue may be conducted to drive the game toward the hunters.

In Rus’, amateur rifle hunting (in contrast to commercial and hound hunting) was called jaeger hunting. (A jaeger was a hunter equipped with a rifle and accompanied by a pointing dog, a professional hunter, or a hunter specially trained to direct hunting. Today the term refers to a staff hunter in a forestry who is responsible for an appointed area.)

Trapping, the taking of game without firearms, is used to hunt furbearing animals and forest and steppe game. Trapping ungulates is prohibited. Spring traps and snares with or without food or scented bait are set near burrows, on paths, and near watering places.

In the past, hunting with hounds was popular in Rus’ and other European countries. Hunters on foot or horseback were accompanied by specially trained scent or sight hounds. The scent hounds drove the game into an open area, perhaps a field, where mounted hunters with packs of sight hounds awaited the game, overtook it, and captured it. Sometimes only sight hounds were used, usually with the mounted hunters themselves pursuing the animal and bringing it to bay.

The chase was the favorite sport of the landowning nobility and of monarchs. In Russia in the 16th and 17th centuries there even existed a court rank of chasseur. The chasseur managed everything that was concerned with the sovereign’s hunting. Numerous people participated in the chase: the chasseur, the huntsmen (managers of the hounds), the senior huntsman (subordinate to the chasseur), the hunters accompanied by sight hounds, whippers-in, and beaters. Today chases are very rare. At the end of the 19th century par force hunting, borrowed from France, was popular in Russia. Mounted hunters sought to capture an animal brought to bay by hounds. The hunters grabbed the animal from the dogs, not allowing it to be torn to pieces. Strong, sturdy horses, capable of rapidly following the hounds over rough ground, were trained specially for par force hunting. In France par force hunting was a palace diversion. The sport is pursued today in France and Great Britain.

Falconry, the use of falcons, eagles, and hawks to capture a frightened animal (fox, wolf, corsac), was used in Russia principally in open areas, for example, steppes. In the USSR, falconry is almost nonexistent.

Hunting may be for commercial, sport, or scientific purposes. Commercial hunting is the capturing of game for fur, meat, and other products used by the public and industry. Some of the products are exported. The principal animals sought are valuable furbearers and ungulates (except for temporarily or permanently protected species), as well as forest and aquatic game. Hunting for sport, which has as its principal goal the capture of game (part of which becomes commercial products), develops physical powers, courage, and special skills in amateur hunters and sportsmen. The sport is becoming a popular form of relaxation. Hunting tourism, both within a country and abroad, is being developed. Sportsmen primarily hunt forest, steppe, aquatic, and marsh game, as well as rabbits, foxes, wolves, and ungulates. Hunting for scientific purposes is conducted by research institutions for the purpose of studying game animals, wildlife diseases, and the hunting industry, as well as for compiling regional studies. (Museums and scientific collections are enriched by stuffed wild animals.) Harmful animals, such as hamsters, water rats, susliks, and wolves, may be hunted with any type of weapon and by any method, including poisons, biological control, and propagation of animals that exterminate pests. Such animals are hunted principally in places where they are destructive to agriculture.

In the USSR the development of hunting within the framework of the rational use of natural resources looks promising. Game resources are rich and varied. Extensive areas are inhabited by more than 100 species of furbearers, more than 20 species of wild ungulates (boar, saiga, elk, roe deer, mush deer, Japanese deer, reindeer, Caucasian and Daghestan turs, ibex, argali, bighorn sheep), and more than 150 species of game birds. (For information on the hunting of marine mammals see SEAL-HUNTING and WHALING.)

Fur is the principal commercial product of hunting. The USSR has consistently been among the world’s greatest fur producers. By-products of hunting are meat, fat, hides, feathers, down, the “furry” hides of wild birds (divers, grebes, cormorants, guillemots), musk (a fragrant substance excreted by special glands of the musk deer, beaver, muskrat, desman), and hair (badger, Siberian weasel). Furs, forest game, antlers in the velvet, the meat of ungulates, and live rare species are exported. Animals and birds for populating new areas, zoos, and zoological gardens are obtained by hunting.

The shooting and trapping of game in the USSR are regulated by laws, administrative orders, and other normative acts directed toward the rational use, preservation, and replenishment of stocks of useful wild animals (see). All Union republics except the RSFSR adhere to the same hunting code. The RSFSR, whose territory embraces several natural climatic zones (from polar to subtropical), has a special hunting code, Regulations on Hunting and Game Management of the RSFSR (1960), which was ratified by the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR.

The right to hunt with rifles in the USSR is granted to citizens at least 18 years of age who have hunting permits and are members of hunting societies. A hunting permit in the USSR, a standard form throughout the country, grants the right to hunt various species of game. It is issued by local hunting managerial bodies or by hunting societies. Hunting without a permit or with an expired permit is illegal (see ILLEGAL HUNTING and POACHING). Shooting and trapping of valuable species are permitted by license (special permits issued by the managerial bodies). There is a fee for licenses to hunt ungulates. Enforcement of hunting laws, regulation of seasons and methods, and coordination of the work of procurement organizations and unions of hunters’ societies are carried out by the Central Administrations for Conservation, Natural Preserves, and the Hunting Industry under the Ministry of Agriculture of the USSR under the Council of Ministers of the RSFSR, by the State Hunting Inspection, and by the Hunting Supervision Service.

Outside the USSR, commercial hunting, principally for furbearers, is widely pursued in China, the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Norway. Game is hunted for export in Finland, Hungary, and Poland. Sport hunting exists in most countries. In almost all countries, hunting is regulated by legislation and supervised by the government. In many countries, along with basic laws regulating hunting, there is extensive legislation directed toward wildlife protection. Hunters in socialist countries must be members of a hunters’ society, which leases state hunting lands and undertakes all necessary biotechnical measures. In capitalist countries, hunting, both commercial and sport, is usually conducted on the basis of paid licenses. Tourist sport hunting is organized by special firms for large fees. The fees are especially high in countries of Southeast Asia and Africa.

Current issues concerning the development of hunting involve the problems of rational use and conservation of wildlife resources. These problems are being studied within the country and internationally. (See also BIOTECHNY, , and .)

REFERENCES

Sputnik promyslovogo okhotnika.[Edited by P. A. Manteifel’ and B. A. Kuznetsov.] Moscow, 1954.
Spangenberg, B. P., and V. V. Riabov. Okhota i okhotnich’e khoziaistvo SSSR, 2nd ed. Moscow, 1964.
Sputnik nachinaiushchego okhotnika. Moscow, 1965.
Posobie dlia okhotnika, 3rd ed. Edited by I. D. Kiris. Moscow, 1972.
Rusanov, la. S. Okhota i okhrana fauny. Moscow, 1973.

B. N. BOGDANOV and O. S. KOLBASOV

What does it mean when you dream about hunting?

Hunting for something indicates that one is seeking to fulfill inner desires, whether emotional or physical.

hunting

[′hənt·iŋ] (control systems) Undesirable oscillation of an automatic control system, wherein the controlled variable swings on both sides of the desired value. (electronics) Operation of a selector in moving from terminal to terminal until one is found which is idle. (mechanical engineering) Irregular engine speed resulting from instability of the governing device.

hunting

In applications to aircraft flight, engines, and instruments: An uncontrollable oscillation about a neutral point on a continuous basis, the amplitude of which remains approximately constant. Hunting can be in the case of governed RPM, governed speed, or desired flight attitude. In helicopters, it is oscillation of a rotor blade back and forth about its lead-lag hinge as the blade is rotating.

Hunting

Agraeusepithet of Apollo, meaning “hunter.” [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 26]Agroteraepithet of Artemis, meaning “huntress.” [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 32]Artemis(Rom. Diana) moon goddess; virgin huntress. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 36]Atalantafamous huntress; slew the Centaurs. [Gk. Myth.: Leach, 87]BritomartisCretan nymph; goddess of hunters and fishermen. [Gk. Myth.: Zimmerman, 43]Calydonian boar huntfamed hunt of Greek legend. [Class. Myth: Metamorphoses]Green Hills of Africaportrays big game-hunting coupled with literary digressions. [Am. Lit.: Green Hills of Africa]Hubert, St.patron saint; encountered stag with cross in horns. [Christian Hagiog.: Brewster, 473–474]Jorrocksirrepressible pseudo-aristocratic cockney huntsman. [Br. Lit.: Jorrock’s Jaunts and Jollies]NRA(National Rifle Association of America) organization that encourages sharpshooting and use of firearms for hunting. [Am. Pop. Culture: NCE, 1895]NimrodBiblical hunter of great prowess. [O.T.: Genesis 10:9; Br. Lit.: Paradise Lost]Orionhunter who pursued the Pleiades. [Classical Myth.: Zimmerman 184–185]Sagittariusthe Archer of the Zodiac; used occasionally to symbolize hunting. [Astrology: Payton, 594]Stymphalian birdsvenomous Arcadian flock shot by Hercules; sixth Labor. [Gk. and Rom. Myth.: Hall, 149]“tally ho”traditional rallying cry in English fox hunts. [Pop. Cult.: Misc.]

hunting


hunt·ing

(hŭnt'ing), The oscillation of a controlled variable, such as the temperature of a thermostat, around its set point. See: hunting reaction.

Hunting


Related to Hunting: deer hunting

Hunting

The regulation of hunting is a matter reserved to the states as part of their Police Power under the Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (Totemoff v. Alaska, 905 P.2d 954 [Alaska 1995]). Congress maintains statutes that regulate hunting on federal land. States may further regulate the federal lands located within their boundaries so long as their laws do not conflict with federal laws.

South Dakota and Georgia illustrate the sort of hunting laws typically maintained by a state. In South Dakota hunting is regulated by Title 41 of the South Dakota Codified Laws Annotated, Section 41-1-1 et seq. Under Title 41 hunters must obtain from the game, fish, and parks commission a license for the privilege of hunting in South Dakota. Other states maintain similar commissions or boards to implement licensing procedures and policies.

Licensing parameters vary from state to state. Most states have minimum age requirements. In South Dakota, for example, no person under the age of 12 may obtain a license, but an 11-year-old may obtain a license to hunt between September 1 and December 31 if he or she will turn 12 in that period. A child under the age of 16 may obtain a basic game and fish license without cost, but only if he or she has completed a firearms safety course. A parent of the child must apply for the license, and the child may hunt only with a parent, guardian, or responsible adult (§ 41-6-13).

In Georgia any person over the age of 12 may hunt on his or her own land. If a person between the ages of 12 and 15 seeks to hunt, he or she must complete a hunter education course, and then may hunt only with a parent or guardian. This is true even for children between the ages of 12 and 15 who are hunting on the land of their parents or guardians. A person between the ages of 16 and 25 must also complete a hunter education course before obtaining a hunting license.

States may make licensing exceptions for certain persons. In Georgia, for example, persons over the age of 65 may receive a hunting license without paying a fee. Furthermore, persons who are permanently and totally disabled may obtain a hunting or fishing license for free (Ga. Code Ann. § 27-2-4 [1996]).

In some states an additional license must be obtained to hunt certain animals whose populations are of concern to the state. In South Dakota these animals are small game, big game, fur-bearing animals, and migratory waterfowl. An additional license is required for these animals so that the commission can keep track of the number of persons hunting them and conserve their populations.

To control animal populations, state licensing commissions also allow the hunting of certain animals only at certain times of the year. These time periods are called open seasons, and they are set each year by the state regulatory commission. Open seasons limitations sometimes come with special exceptions. In South Dakota, for example, residents do not need a license to hunt game birds on their own land during an open season.

Most states place separate restrictions on resident versus nonresident licensing and hunting for certain animals. In South Dakota, for example, nonresidents may hunt only if they have obtained a special nonresident license. A nonresident may hunt small and big game, waterfowl, and wild turkey. A nonresident must obtain a nonresident predator license to hunt predators, but if the nonresident has a nonresi-dent small-game, big-game, waterfowl, or wild turkey license, the nonresident may hunt predators in the animal group authorized by that license without a separate nonresident predator license (S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 41-6-30). Predators include jackrabbits, prairie dogs, gophers, ground squirrels, coyotes, red foxes, gray foxes, skunks, crows, and porcupines.

States may place additional restrictions on the hunting of certain animals. In Georgia, for example, feral hogs may be hunted only in certain situations. For instance, a hunter may not shoot a feral hog during deer season unless the hunter and all persons accompanying the hunter are each wearing a total of at least five hundred square inches of daylight florescent orange material as an outer garment above the waistline. In South Dakota fur-bearing animals are completely off-limits to nonresidents. No person may apply for a license to take protected fur-bearing animals unless he or she has lived in the state for 90 days prior to the application date (§ 41-6-24).

State hunting statutes also specify standards for firearm power. In South Dakota, for example, no one may hunt big game with a muzzle loading rifle that discharges a projectile less than forty-four hundredths of an inch in diameter. No one may hunt big game with buckshot, or with a single ball or rifled slug weighing less than one-half ounce. No self-loading or autoloading firearm that holds more than six cartridges may be used to hunt big game, and no fully automatic weapons may be used to hunt big or small game (§ 41-8-10, -13).

States may enact a variety of other restrictions on hunting. In Georgia, at night, no person may hunt any game bird or game animal except for raccoon, opossums, foxes, and bobcats. Those animals may be hunted at night, but only with a lantern or a light that does not exceed six volts (Ga. Code Ann. § 27-3-24). In South Dakota no dogs may be used in the hunting of big game, no person may use salt to entice big game, and no person may use artificial light in hunting (S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 41-8-15, -16). However, an animal damage control officer may use an artificial light to take a Nuisance animal from land, with the landowner's written permission (§ 41-8-17[3]).

Most states consider hunting a right of residents and a valuable promotional tool for tourism. Many states even have hunter harassment statutes, which punish persons for intentionally distracting hunters. Under such statutes a person may be arrested and prosecuted for attempting to discourage hunters or drive away game.

Further readings

Cottriel, Darren K. 1996. "The Right to Hunt in the Twenty-First Century: Can the Public Trust Doctrine Save an American Tradition?" Pacific Law Journal 27 (spring): 1235–87.

"Fargo Face Off: Governors Battle over Hunting." September 3, 2003. ESPN.com: Outdoors. Available online at <espn.go.com/outdoors/conservation/news/2003/0903/1608662.html> (accessed September 25, 2003).

"Ruling Sought on Indian Hunting, Fishing Rules." September 17, 2003. CNN.com: U.S. News. Available online at <www.cnn.com/2003/US/Midwest/09/17/tribes.hunting> (accessed September 25, 2003).

Ugalde, Aileen M. 1991. "The Right to Arm Bears: Activists' Protests against Hunting." University of Miami Law Review 45.

Cross-references

Fish and Fishing.

HUNTING. The act of pursuing and taking wild animals; the chase.
2. The chase gives a kind of title by occupancy, by which the hunter acquires a right or property in the game which he captures. In the United States, the right of hunting is universal, and limited only so far as to exclude hunters from committing injuries to private property or to the public; as, by shooting on public roads. Vide Feroe naturae; Occupancy.

hunting


Related to hunting: deer hunting
  • noun

Synonyms for hunting

noun blood sports

Synonyms

  • blood sports
  • coursing
  • stalking
  • field sports

Synonyms for hunting

noun the pursuit and killing or capture of wild animals regarded as a sport

Synonyms

  • hunt

Related Words

  • field sport
  • outdoor sport
  • blood sport
  • battue
  • beagling
  • coursing
  • deer hunt
  • deer hunting
  • duck hunting
  • ducking
  • fox hunting
  • foxhunt
  • pigsticking
  • bag
  • batfowl
  • snare
  • trammel
  • trap
  • ensnare
  • entrap
  • gin

noun the activity of looking thoroughly in order to find something or someone

Synonyms

  • search
  • hunt

Related Words

  • activity
  • exploration
  • foraging
  • forage
  • frisk
  • frisking
  • looking for
  • looking
  • manhunt
  • seeking
  • quest
  • ransacking
  • rummage
  • scouring
  • shakedown

noun the work of finding and killing or capturing animals for food or pelts

Synonyms

  • hunt

Related Words

  • canned hunt
  • toil
  • labor
  • labour
  • stalking
  • still hunt
  • stalk
  • birdnesting
  • predation
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