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, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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will help you to be more precise and correct when speaking or writing your texts. Knowing the definition of
, as well as those of other words, enriches your vocabulary and provides you with more and better linguistic resources.
English
A wolf.
Etymology
From Middle English wolf , from Old English wulf , ƿulf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos . See also Saterland Frisian Wulf , West Frisian and Dutch wolf , German Wolf , Norwegian and Danish ulv ; also Sanskrit वृक ( vṛ́ka ) , Persian گرگ ( gorg ) , Lithuanian vilkas , Russian волк ( volk ) , Albanian ujk , Latin lupus , Greek λύκος ( lýkos ) , Tocharian B walkwe . Doublet of lobo and lupus .
Pronunciation
Noun
wolf (plural wolves )
Canis lupus ; the largest wild member of the canine subfamily.
Synonym: grey wolf
1968 , Robert Conquest , “The Purge Begins”, in The Great Terror: Stalin's Purge of the Thirties , Macmillan Company , →LCCN , →OCLC , →OL , page 74 :He would listen quietly at meetings of the Politburo, or to distinguished visitors, puffing at his Dunhill pipe, doodling aimlessly - his secretaries Poskrebyshev and Dvinsky write that his pads were sometimes covered with the phrase ‘Lenin-teacher-friend’, but the last foreigner to visit him, in February 1953, noted that he was doodling wolves .
Any of several related canines that resemble Canis lupus in appearance, especially those of the genus Canis .
A man who makes amorous advances to many women.
( music ) A wolf tone or wolf note .
The soft violin solo was marred by persistent wolves .
( figurative ) Any very ravenous, rapacious, or destructive person or thing; especially, want ; starvation .
They toiled hard to keep the wolf from the door.
1918 , W[illiam] B[abington] Maxwell , chapter XII, in The Mirror and the Lamp , Indianapolis, Ind.: The Bobbs-Merrill Company , →OCLC , page 85 :“ [ …] Churchill, my dear fellow, we have such greedy sharks, and wolves in lamb's clothing. Oh, dear, there's so much to tell you, so many warnings to give you, but all that must be postponed for the moment.”
One of the destructive, and usually hairy, larvae of several species of beetles and grain moths.
A white worm which infests granaries, the larva of Nemapogon granella , a tineid moth .
A wolf spider .
( obsolete ) An eating ulcer or sore. See lupus .
1651 , Jer[emy] Taylor , The Rule and Exercises of Holy Living. , 2nd edition, London: Francis Ashe , →OCLC :If God should send a cancer upon thy face, or a wolf into thy side
A willying machine , to cleanse wool or willow.
1872 , Johann Rudolph von Wagner, A handbook of Chemical Technology :The loosening and purifying of the raw cotton from the various impurities , such as sand, grit, &c., is accomplished by beating with the hand, or by the Wolf machine, by means of a cylinder, the surface of which is covered with sharp iron teeth
Synonyms
Hypernyms
Hyponyms
Coordinate terms
Derived terms
Descendants
→ Ido: volfo ( also from German )
Translations
animal
Abaza: квыджьма ( kʷədźma )
Abenaki: môlsem
Abkhaz: абгаду ( abgadu ) , ақәыџьма ( akʷədžma )
Adyghe: тыгъужъ ( təğʷuẑ )
Afrikaans: wolf (af)
Aghwan: 𐕒𐕡𐔾 ( ul )
Ainu: ホㇿケゥ ( horkew ) , ウォセカムイ ( wose-kamuy )
Akkadian: 𒌨𒁇𒊏 m ( barbaru )
Albanian: ujk (sq) m
Aleut: aliĝngix̂
Algonquin: mahìgan , mokquishim
Amharic: ተኩላ ( täkula )
Andi: боцӏо ( bocʼo )
Arabic: ذِئْب (ar) m ( ḏiʔb )
Egyptian Arabic: ديب m ( dīb )
Gulf Arabic: ذيب ( ḏīb )
Hijazi Arabic: ذيب m ( ḏīb, dīb )
Moroccan Arabic: ديب m ( dīb )
Aramaic:
Classical Syriac: ܕܐܒܐ m ( dēḇā ) , ܕܐܒܬܐ f ( dēḇtā )
Jewish Babylonian Aramaic: דֵּיבָא m ( dêḇā )
Armenian: գայլ (hy) ( gayl )
Old Armenian: գայլ ( gayl )
Aromanian: lupu m
Assamese: কুকুৰনেচীয়া বাঘ ( kukurnesia bagh )
Asturian: llobu (ast) m
Atikamekw: mahikan
Avar: бацӏ ( bacʼ )
Azerbaijani: canavar (az) , qurd (az)
Balti: شانكو ( shanko )
Baluchi: گرک ( gurk )
Bashkir: бүре ( büre )
Basque: otso (eu)
Bats: ბჵორწ ( b'orc̣ )
Bavarian: Woif
Belarusian: воўк (be) m ( voŭk ) , ваўчы́ца f ( vaŭčýca ) , ваўчы́ха f ( vaŭčýxa )
Bengali: নেকড়ে (bn) ( nekoṛe )
Bhojpuri: भेड़िया ( bhēṛiyā )
Blackfoot: omahkapi'si
Breton: bleiz (br) m
Bulgarian: вълк (bg) m ( vǎlk )
Burmese: ဝံပုလွေ (my) ( wampu.lwe )
Buryat: шоно ( šono )
Carpathian Rusyn: вовк m ( vovk )
Catalan: llop (ca) m
Central Atlas Tamazight: ⵓⵛⵛⵏ ( uccn )
Central Sierra Miwok: húŋ·u-
Chagatai: بورى ( böri )
Chakma: 𑄤𑄇𑄴 ( wāk )
Chechen: борз ( borz )
Cherokee: ᏩᏯ ( waya )
Cheyenne: hó'nehe
Chinese:
Cantonese: 狼 ( long4 )
Dungan: лон ( lon ) , мулон ( mulon ) , лонвазы ( lonvazɨ )
Eastern Min: 狼 ( lòng )
Hakka: 狼 ( lòng )
Hokkien: 狼 (zh-min-nan) ( lông )
Mandarin: 狼 (zh) ( láng )
Wu: 狼 ( 6 laon)
Chukchi: иʼны ( iʼny ) , ээʼгычгын ( ėėʼgyčgyn )
Chuvash: кашкӑр ( kaškăr )
Coptic: ⲟⲩⲱⲛϣ ( ouōnš )
Cornish: bleydh m
Corsican: lupu (co) m
Cree: mahihkan
Crimean Tatar: börü
Czech: vlk (cs) m
Danish: ulv (da) c
Dogrib: dìga
Dolgan: бөрө ( börö )
Dutch: wolf (nl) m
Dzongkha: please add this translation if you can
Eastern Cham: ꨔꨪꩂ ( thing ) , ꨀꨧꨭꩃ ꨔꨪꩂ ( asơu thing )
Elfdalian: warg m
Emilian: låuv m
Erzya: верьгиз ( veŕgiz )
Esperanto: lupo (eo)
Estonian: susi (et) , hunt (et)
Evenki: иргичи ( irgiçi )
Ewe: amegãxi
Faroese: úlvur m
Finnish: susi (fi) , hukka (fi) , susihukka
Franco-Provençal: lop m
French: loup (fr) m
Friulian: lôf m , lôv m
Gabrielino-Fernandeño: 'iisawut
Galician: lobo (gl) m
Gaulish: drucocu
Georgian: მგელი ( mgeli )
German: Wolf (de) m , Meister Graubein m ( esp. in fables & fairy tales )
Gilaki: ورگ ( varg )
Gondi: तोडेल्ली ( tōḍēllī )
Gothic: 𐍅𐌿𐌻𐍆𐍃 m ( wulfs )
Greek: λύκος (el) m ( lýkos )
Ancient: λύκος m ( lúkos )
Greenlandic: amaroq (kl)
Guaraní: jaguaru
Gujarati: ભેડીયો ( bheḍīyo )
Haida: g̱úuj
Haitian Creole: lou
Hawaiian: ʻīlio hae
Hebrew: זְאֵב (he) m ( z'év )
Hindi: भेड़िया (hi) m ( bheṛiyā ) , वृक (hi) m ( vŕk ) , गुर्ग (hi) m ( gurg )
Holikachuk: nikʼighun
Hopi: kwewu
Hungarian: farkas (hu)
Hunsrik: Wollef m
Icelandic: úlfur (is) m
Ido: volfo (io)
Indonesian: serigala (id)
Ingrian: susi , ( rare ) huntti , ( folk poetic ) suto
Ingush: борз ( borz )
Interlingua: lupo (ia)
Inuktitut: ᐊᒪᕈᖅ (iu) ( amaroq )
Inupiaq: amaġuq
Irish: faolchú m , mac tíre m , madra alla m , madra allta m
Middle Irish: fáel , fáelchú , sídach
Old Irish: cú , cú allaid , macc tíre , fáel m
Istro-Romanian: lup m
Italian: lupo (it) m
Itelmen: хивнэ
Japanese: 狼 (ja) ( おおかみ, ōkami ) , オオカミ (ja) ( ōkami ) , ウルフ (ja) ( urufu )
Javanese: mbaung (jv)
Jicarilla: ba’iitso
Kabardian: дыгъужь (kbd) ( dəğʷuź )
Kaki Ae: weldok
Kalasha: grast
Kalmyk: чон ( çon )
Kannada: ತೋಳ (kn) ( tōḷa )
Karachay-Balkar: бёрю ( börü )
Karakalpak: bo'ri , qasqır
Karelian: hukka
Kashmiri: رامہٕ ہوٗن (ks) ( rāmhụ hūn )
Kashubian: wilk m
Kazakh: бөрі ( börı ) , қасқыр ( qasqyr )
Ket: ӄыт ( qyt )
Khakas: пӱӱр ( püür )
Khmer: ចចក (km) ( cɑcɑɑk )
Khvarshi: боцӏа ( boc’a )
Kildin Sami: пальтэсь ( pal’tes’ ) , скуммьп ( skumm’p )
Komi-Zyrian: кӧин ( köin )
Korean: 늑대 (ko) ( neukdae ) , 이리 (ko) ( iri )
Koryak: гʼэгылӈын ( ʕeɣəlŋən )
Koyraboro Senni: ganjihanŝi
Kumyk: бёрю ( börü )
Kurdish:
Central Kurdish: گورگ (ckb) ( gurg )
Laki: گوِرگ (ku) ( gwirg )
Northern Kurdish: gur (ku) m , gurg (ku) m
Southern Kurdish: گوِرگ (ku) ( gwirg )
Kyrgyz: бөрү (ky) ( börü ) , карышкыр ( karışkır )
Ladin: louf m
Lak: барцӏ ( barcʼ )
Lakota: šuŋgmánitu tȟáŋka
Lao: ໝາປ່າ (lo) ( mā pā ) , ໝາໄນ (lo) ( mā nai ) , ສິຄາລະ ( si khā la )
Latgalian: vylks
Latin: lupus (la) m
Latvian: vilks (lv) m
Lenape:
Unami: tëme
Lezgi: жанавур ( žanavur )
Ligurian: lô m
Lithuanian: vilkas (lt) m
Livvi: hukku
Lolopo: veimar
Lombard: loff (lmo) m , lov (lmo) m
Low German: Wulf (nds) m
Luxembourgish: Wollef (lb) m
Macedonian: волк m ( volk )
Malagasy: amboadia (mg)
Malay:
Jawi: سريݢالا , ذيب
Rumi: serigala (ms) , zib
Malayalam: ചെന്നായ് (ml) ( cennāyŭ )
Maltese: dib m , lupu m
Manchu: ᠨᡳᠣᡥᡝ ( niohe )
Mansi:
Northern Mansi: са̄лы пурнэ ӯй ( sāly purnè ūj ) , са̄лыуй ( sālyuj ) , ха̄йтнут ( hājtnut )
Manx: moddey oaldey m
Maori: wuruhi (mi) , wuruwhi
Marathi: लांडगा m ( lāṇḍgā ) , वृक m ( vŕk )
Mari:
Eastern Mari: пире ( pire )
Western Mari: пирӹ ( pirÿ )
Mazanderani: ورگ ( vërg )
Mbyá Guaraní: aguara-jagua
Mi'kmaq: paqt'sm anim , paqtesm anim , paqte'smug anim
Mingo: utháyôni
Mingrelian: გერი ( geri )
Mirandese: lhobo m
Mòcheno: bolf m
Moksha: врьгаз ( vŕgaz )
Mongolian:
Cyrillic: чоно (mn) ( čono )
Montagnais: maikan
Muong: khỏl
Nahuatl: cuetlāchtli (nah)
Nanai: енгур ( jeŋur )
Navajo: mąʼiitsoh
Naxi: paqkee , xulkee
Nepali: ब्वाँसो ( bwā̃so )
Nganasan: ӈӱлиаӡә
Ngazidja Comorian: dhiiɓu
Nivkh: лиғс ( liγs )
Nogai: боьри ( böri )
Nootka: qʷayac̕iik
North Frisian: ulf , Ulv m ( Sylt )
Northern Sami: gumpe
Norwegian:
Bokmål: ulv (no) m , varg m , gråbein m ( noa term)
Nynorsk: ulv (nn) m , varg m , gråbein m ( noa term)
Nuosu: ꆿꍫ ( lat cho ) , ꆿꆚ ( lat hlip )
Occitan: lop (oc) m
Odia: please add this translation if you can
Ojibwe: ma'iingan
Old Church Slavonic:
Cyrillic: влькъ m ( vlĭkŭ ) , вльчица f ( vlĭčica )
Glagolitic: ⰲⰾⱐⰽⱏ m ( vlĭkŭ )
Old East Slavic: вълкъ m ( vŭlkŭ )
Old English: wulf m
Old Norse: úlfr m
Oromo: yeeyyii
Oroqen: guykə
Ossetian: бирӕгъ ( biræǧ )
Ottoman Turkish: قورت ( kurt )
Pali: vaka m
Pannonian Rusyn: вовк m ( vovk )
Pashto: لېوه (ps) m ( lewë ) , شرمښ (ps) m ( šërmëẍ )
Pawnee: ckírihki
Persian:
Dari: گُرْگ (fa) ( gurg )
Iranian Persian: گُرْگ (fa) ( gorg )
Piedmontese: luv m
Plains Apache: ba’
Plautdietsch: Wulf (nds) m
Polabian: våuk m
Polish: wilk (pl) m anim , basior (pl) m anim , wadera (pl) f
Portuguese: lobo (pt) m
Punjabi:
Gurmukhi: ਬਘਿਆੜ (pa) m ( baghiāṛa )
Shahmukhi: بَگِھیاڑ m ( baghieyāṛ )
Quechua: atawka
Rohingya: please add this translation if you can
Romani: ruv m
Romanian: lup (ro) m
Romansch: luf m , louf m
Russian: волк (ru) m ( volk ) , волчи́ца (ru) f ( volčíca )
Sabine: hirpus
Salar: bori
Samogitian: vėlks m
Sanskrit: वृक (sa) m ( vṛka ) , श्वक (sa) m ( śvaka )
Saterland Frisian: Wulf m
Scots: wouf
Scottish Gaelic: faol m , madadh-allaidh m
Serbo-Croatian:
Cyrillic: ву̑к m
Roman: vȗk (sh) m
Seri: xeecoj , ziix yaacö caaixaj
Sherpa: སྤྱང་ཀུ ( spyang ku )
Shor: пӧрӱ ( pörü )
Sicilian: lupu (scn) m
Sinhalese: වෘකයා ( wr̥kayā )
Skolt Sami: čõrmm
Slovak: vlk (sk) m
Slovene: volk (sl) m
Somali: yey (so)
Sorbian:
Lower Sorbian: wjelk m
Upper Sorbian: wjelk m
Southern Altai: бӧрӱ ( börü )
Spanish: lobo (es) m
Sumerian: 𒌨𒁇𒊏 ( urbarra )
Svan: თხე̄რე ( txēre )
Swahili: mbwa mwitu class 9 /10
Swedish: varg (sv) c , ulv (sv) c
Sylheti: please add this translation if you can
T'en: laput
Tabasaran: жанавар ( žanavar )
Tagalog: lobo (tl)
Tahltan: ch’iyōne
Tajik: гург (tg) ( gurg )
Tamil: ஓநாய் (ta) ( ōnāy )
Taos: kòléna
Tarifit: uššen m
Tat: gürg
Tatar: бүре (tt) ( büre )
Tày: ma nuầy
Telugu: తోడేలు (te) ( tōḍēlu )
Thai: หมาป่า (th) ( mǎa-bpàa ) , สุนัขป่า ( sù-nák-bpàa )
Tibetan: སྦྱང་ཀུ ( sbyang ku ) , སྤྱང་ཀི ( spyang ki )
Tigrinya: ተዅላ ( täxʷla )
Tlingit: g̱ooch
Tocharian B: walkwe
Tok Pisin: weldok
Tundra Nenets: ӈылека ( ŋilyeka ) , сармик ( sarmyik° )
Turkish: kurt (tr) , börü (tr)
Turkmen: böri (tk) , gurt , möjek (tk)
Tuvan: бөрү ( börü )
Udi: ул ( ul )
Udmurt: кион ( kion )
Ukrainian: вовк (uk) m ( vovk ) , вовчи́ця f ( vovčýcja ) , вовчи́ха f ( vovčýxa )
Urak Lawoi': อาซู ฮูตัด ( asu hutat )
Urdu: بھیڑِیا m ( bheṛiyā ) , گُرْگ m ( gurg )
Urum: джанавар
Uyghur: قۇرت ( qurt ) , بۆرە (ug) ( böre ) , قاراشقاۇ ( qarashqau ) , قارىشقۇ ( qarishqu )
Uzbek: boʻri (uz) , qashqir (uz)
Venetan: łovo m , lovo (vec) m
Veps: händikaz
Vietnamese: sói (vi) , chó sói (vi)
Vilamovian: wūf m
Volapük: lup (vo) , ludog ( obsolete )
Võro: susi
Votic: susi
Walloon: leu (wa) m
Welsh: blaidd (cy) m
West Frisian: wolf c
Western Apache: ma’choh , ba’choh , ba'cho , mbaaʼtsu
Winnebago: šųųkjąk
Yagnobi: урк ( urk )
Yakut: бөрө ( börö )
Yiddish: וואָלף m ( volf )
Yokuts:
Southern Valley Yokuts: yawlicʼ ( Yawelmani )
Yup'ik: kegluneq
Zazaki: verg (diq)
Zhuang: manaez
Zulu: inja yasendle class 9 /10
Zuni: yuna:wik'o
constellation
— see Lupus
man who makes amorous advances on many women
References
Verb
wolf (third-person singular simple present wolfs , present participle wolfing , simple past and past participle wolfed )
( transitive ) To devour ; to gobble ; to eat (something) voraciously .
1918 , Norman Lindsay , The Magic Pudding , Sydney: Angus and Robertson, page 150 :"Here's these legal ferrets has got our Puddin' in their clutches, and here's us, spellbound with anguish, watchin' them wolfin' it."
1987 , James Ellroy, The Black Dahlia :After a wolfed burger dinner, I called the night number at Administrative Vice and inquired about known lesbian gathering places.
2013 , Neil Martin, Collected Stories of the Sea :Vicars seated himself and began wolfing a sandwich.
( intransitive , slang ) To make amorous advances to many women; to hit on women; to cruise for sex.
1949 , Nelson Algren , The Man with the Golden Arm :[1940s Chicago punk:] ‘I’ve seen a thing or two in my time,’ he still liked to boast, ‘that was how I found out the best place for wolfin’ ain’t the taverns. It ain’t in dance halls ’r on North Clark on Saturday night. It’s in the front row in Sunday school on Sunday mornin’. Oh yeh, I know a thing or two, I been around.’
( intransitive ) To hunt for wolves.
Synonyms
Translations
to devour
Arabic: اِلْتَهَمَ بِشَرَاهَة ( iltahama bi-šarāha )
Finnish: hotkia (fi) , ahmia (fi)
French: dévorer (fr) , engloutir (fr)
Galician: devorar (gl) , engulir (gl) , galdrumar
German: herunterschlingen
Greek: καταβροχθίζω (el) ( katavrochthízo ) , χλαπακιάζω (el) ( chlapakiázo )
Hebrew: זלל (he) ( zalal )
Italian: divorare (it)
Korean: 게걸스레 먹다 ( gegeolseure meokda )
Latin: devorare
Maori: apu , whāō
Polish: pożreć (pl) , pochłonąć (pl)
Portuguese: devorar (pt)
Russian: пожира́ть (ru) impf ( požirátʹ ) , пожра́ть (ru) pf ( požrátʹ )
Serbo-Croatian: žderati (sh)
Spanish: devorar (es) , engullir (es)
Swahili: -akia , -la , -sakata
Thai: ขม้ำ (th) ( khà màhm ) , สวาปาม (th) ( swáá bpaam )
References
↑ 1.0 1.1 “wolf ”, in Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary , Springfield, Mass.: Merriam-Webster , 1996–present.
^ Kristin Denham and Anne Lobeck, in Linguistics for Everyone: An Introduction (2009), page 136
Further reading
Anagrams
Afrikaans
Etymology
From Dutch wolf , from Middle Dutch wolf , from Old Dutch *wulf , *wolf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Pronunciation
Noun
wolf (plural wolwe )
wolf
Alemannic German
Etymology
From Middle High German wolf , from Old High German wolf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz . Cognate with German Wolf , Dutch wolf , English wolf , Icelandic úlfur .
Noun
wolf m
( Carcoforo , Formazza , Gressoney , Issime , Rimella and Campello Monti ) wolf
References
Dutch
Twee wolven in de sneeuw. — Two wolves in the snow.
Etymology
From Middle Dutch wolf , from Old Dutch *wulf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Pronunciation
Noun
wolf m (plural wolven , diminutive wolfje n , feminine wolvin )
wolf , undomesticated Canis lupus
Ze gingen de wolven bekijken in de dierentuin. They went to look at the wolves in the zoo.
one of many other canids of the family Canidae , especially of the genus Canis
Er bestaan verschillende soorten wolven . Various species of wolves exist.
Hypernyms
Hyponyms
Holonyms
Derived terms
Descendants
Middle Dutch
Etymology
From Old Dutch *wulf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Noun
wolf m
wolf , grey wolf
Inflection
Declension of wolf (strong)
Derived terms
Descendants
Further reading
Middle English
Etymology
From Old English wulf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Pronunciation
Noun
wolf (plural wolves , diminutive wolfy , wolfie )
wolf , lupine
terrifying person
Descendants
Middle High German
Etymology
Inherited from Old High German wolf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Pronunciation
IPA (key ) : ( before 13th CE ) /ˈwolf/
Noun
wolf m
wolf
Declension
Declension of wolf (masculine, class 1 strong )
Descendants
Old High German
Etymology
From Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz .
Pronunciation
Noun
wolf m (plural wolfa )
wolf
Declension
Declension of wolf (masculine a-stem)
Derived terms
Descendants
West Frisian
Etymology
From Old Frisian wolf , from Proto-West Germanic *wulf , from Proto-Germanic *wulfaz , from Proto-Indo-European *wĺ̥kʷos .
Noun
wolf c (plural wolven , diminutive wolfke )
wolf
Further reading
“wolf ”, in Wurdboek fan de Fryske taal (in Dutch), 2011