| 释义 |
murid1 /ˈmjʊərɪd /noun ZoologyA rodent of a very large family (Muridae) which includes most kinds of rats, mice, and voles.Two prime examples of this are the murid rodents (Chinese vole, Norway rat, and house mouse) and the lagomorphs (rabbit, European hare, and pika)....- These include the shrews, some moles, some bats, the striped skunk, the pinniped carnivores, toothed whales, the aardvark, and murid rodents.
- Within rodents, relations are similar to those obtained and discussed previously, notably without any resolution of the relations between four main rodent lineages: murids, sciurids, glirids, and hystricognaths.
Origin Early 20th century: from modern Latin Muridae (plural), based on Latin mus, mur- 'mouse'. murid2 /mjʊˈriːd / /mʊˈriːd/noun1A follower of a Muslim saint, especially a Sufi disciple.With the devotee - master or disciple, shaykh or murid - we are made aware of a new and culturally salient perspective on music. 1.1 (Murid) A member of any of several Muslim movements, especially one which advocated rebellion against the Russians in the Caucasus in the late 19th century.The Murid Islamic Community in America held their annual Celebration of Sheikh Ahmadou Bamba Friday, July 28, 2000....- The Czar moved quickly to quell any other uprising, officially annexing the tribal heartlands and forcing thousands of murids, as well as entire clans, to flee to the Ottoman Empire.
- As Shamil's murids [adherents or partisans] continued to resist, Russian forces poured into the region, eventually capturing Shamil in 1859.
Origin From Arabic murīd, literally 'he who desires'. |