BEAVER


Meaning of BEAVER in English

I. ˈbēvə(r) noun

( plural beaver or beavers )

Usage: often attributive

Etymology: Middle English bever, from Old English beofor; akin to Old High German bibar beaver, Old Norse bjōrr, Latin fiber, Lithuanian bebrus beaver, Sanskrit babhru large ichneumon, babhru reddish brown — more at brown

1.

a. : either of two large semiaquatic rodents having webbed hind feet and a broad flat tail, feeding chiefly on bark and twigs, being remarkable for ingenuity in the construction of lodges and dams, and yielding valuable fur and castor:

(1) : an Old World rodent ( Castor fiber ) formerly abundant over much of northern Europe and Asia

(2) : a New World congener ( C. canadensis ) whose skins were a major factor in the exploration and settlement of much of No. America and served in early times as a basic standard of exchange

b. : any of certain other rodents that resemble beavers ; especially : mountain beaver

2.

a. : the fur or pelt of the beaver

b. : the fur or pelt of any of various animals processed to resemble that of the beaver — often used with a qualifying word

3.

a. : a hat with a tall approximately cylindrical crown made of beaver fur or a fabric imitation of beaver

tall men wearing beavers

b. : silk hat

4. also beaver cloth

a. : a thick woolen coating in twill weave made with a deep nap to resemble beaver fur

b. : a cotton cloth for clothing napped on both sides

c. : plush used for millinery

5.

a. : made-beaver

b. : one of the 5-dollar or 10-dollar gold coins with the picture of a beaver on the obverse that were issued by the state of Oregon in 1849

6. or beaver brown : a grayish brown that is yellower, less strong, and slightly lighter than chestnut, less strong and slightly yellower and lighter than coconut, and less strong and slightly lighter than new cocoa — called also mushroom, starling

7. usually capitalized

[approximate translation of Beaver Tsattine, literally, dwellers among the beavers]

a. : an Athapaskan people of the Peace river valley in Alberta

b. : a member of such people

8. : the language of the Beaver people

9.

a. : a full beard

b. : a man wearing a full beard

c. : a game in which one shouts “beaver” when he sees a bearded man

10. : eager beaver

II. noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English baviere, from Middle French, beaver, bib, from bave slobber — more at bavardage

1. : a piece of armor protecting the lower part of the face

2. : a helmet visor

saw you not his face? O, yes, my lord; he wore his beaver up — Shakespeare

[s]beaver.jpg[/s] [

B beaver 1

]

III. noun

Etymology: beaver (I)

: the pudenda of a woman — usually considered vulgar

IV. ˈbēvə(r) intransitive verb

( beavered ; beavered ; beavering -v(ə)riŋ ; beavers )

Etymology: from the proverbial energy of the animal

chiefly Britain : to work diligently — usually used with away

my subconscious, beavering away independently, suddenly came up with that dazzlingly brilliant punch line — Yorkshire Post

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.