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 elk [elk]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 麋鹿

  1. ” Ever since, the elk numbers have climbed.
    从那时以来,麋鹿数量便一直上升。
  2. Picture2, Elk Grove Chinese Association10 th anniversary cake.
    图二:为庆祝麋鹿林华人联谊会成立十周年特制的蛋糕。
  3. We both have common interests, which include sailing and elk hunting in winter.
    这里要说得具体,告诉面试官你已经形成了一种能和各种各样的人一起工作的风格。


elk
[ noun ]
  1. large northern deer with enormous flattened antlers in the male; called `elk' in Europe and `moose' in North America

  2. <noun.animal>
  3. large North American deer with large much-branched antlers in the male

  4. <noun.animal>
  5. common deer of temperate Europe and Asia

  6. <noun.animal>


Elk \Elk\ ([e^]lk), prop. n.
a member of the fraternal organization named Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks, supporting various services to
their communities.
[PJC]

Hooper \Hoop"er\, n. (Zo["o]l.) [So called from its note.]
The European whistling, or wild, swan ({Olor cygnus}); --
called also {hooper swan}, {whooping swan}, and {elk}.


Whistling \Whis"tling\,
a. & n. from {Whistle}, v.

{Whistling buoy}. (Naut.) See under {Buoy}.

{Whistling coot} (Zo["o]l.), the American black scoter.

{Whistling Dick}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) An Australian shrike thrush ({Colluricincla Selbii}).
(b) The song thrush. [Prov. Eng.]

{Whistling duck}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The golden-eye.
(b) A tree duck.

{Whistling eagle} (Zo["o]l.), a small Australian eagle
({Haliastur sphenurus}); -- called also {whistling hawk},
and {little swamp eagle}.

{Whistling plover}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The golden plover.
(b) The black-bellied, or gray, plover.

{Whistling snipe} (Zo["o]l.), the American woodcock.

{Whistling swan}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) The European whooper swan; -- called also {wild swan},
and {elk}.
(b) An American swan ({Olor columbianus}). See under {Swan}.


{Whistling teal} (Zo["o]l.), a tree duck, as {Dendrocygna
awsuree} of India.

{Whistling thrush}. (Zo["o]l.)
(a) Any one of several species of singing birds of the genus
{Myiophonus}, native of Asia, Australia, and the East
Indies. They are generally black, glossed with blue, and
have a patch of bright blue on each shoulder. Their note
is a loud and clear whistle.
(b) The song thrush. [Prov. Eng.]


elk \elk\ ([e^]lk), n. [Icel. elgr; akin to Sw. elg, AS. eolh,
OHG. elaho, MHG. elch, cf. L. alces; perh. akin to E. eland.]
(Zo["o]l.)
A large deer, of several species. The European elk {Alces
alces} (formerly {Alces machlis} or {Cervus alces}) is
closely allied to the American moose. The American elk, or
wapiti ({Cervus Canadensis}) the largest member of the deer
family, has large, spreading antlers and is closely related
to the European stag. See {Moose}, and {Wapiti}.
[1913 Webster +PJC]

{Irish elk} (Paleon.), a large, extinct, Quaternary deer
({Cervus giganteus}) with widely spreading antlers. Its
remains have been found beneath the peat of swamps in
Ireland and England. See Illustration in Appendix; also
Illustration of {Antler}.

{Cape elk} (Zo["o]l.), the eland.


elk \elk\, elke \elke\, n. (Zo["o]l.)
The European wild or whistling swan ({Cygnus ferus}).

  1. In the small Montana town of Gardiner, north of the park, starving elk are eating ornamental hedges, trees, and hay donated by sympathetic people.
  2. While some of Yellowstone's elk have left burning areas, none were running, and many are simply bedding down a hundred yards or so from the flames.
  3. Suddenly a small herd of elk cows wandered out from behind a hill to the south, dark shadows out of the beginning of dawn.
  4. During the rut the elk assert dominance enough to collect their harems.
  5. She stops to inspect an elk track, then reels off the names of plants anchored in the dry mountain soil: sage and sego lilies, colorful cinquefoils, an ancient whitebark pine with gnarled branches scratching like claws at the sky.
  6. Bill Drake of the Game Commission, who supervised the census from a hangar at Saint Marys Airport, says, "For Pennsylvanians, elk are pretty impressive.
  7. The problem with bison, or American buffalo, and elk in the huge Yellowstone National Park is that infected animals can roam onto cattle rangelands, mingle with herds and thus spread the disease.
  8. Inside Yellowstone, rangers have counted more than 300 elk carcasses.
  9. The elk stand out against a backdrop of snow, and their tracks and beds are easier to spot.
  10. It is home to elk, moose, deer, bald eagles and other species that inhabit the park.
  11. The group owns some of the area's best winter range for elk, deer, bison and antelope, Coleman said.
  12. Hunters are not allowed to kill elk in Pennsylvania, but Drake and others acknowledge a limited hunt is not out of the question at some point in the future.
  13. I thought it was an elk and Shot," the 70-year-old elk hunter told the court.
  14. I thought it was an elk and Shot," the 70-year-old elk hunter told the court.
  15. Hunters sharing their game with the homeless and hungry are getting heat from animal-rights groups and health officials willing to look a gift deer - or elk, moose or red stag - in the mouth.
  16. Jackson, 38, was charged with poaching 13 elk in late September after an anonymous caller told officials Jackson had an illegally obtained polar bear skin, Perregrin said.
  17. "Even if winter kill (of northern herd elk) is 50 percent, there would still be a core that would rapidly reproduce," he said.
  18. About 20,000 elk and 2,600 bison spend the winter in Yellowstone. The Park Service estimates that four bison and 250 elk died in the fires, which simply forced most big mammals into different parts of the park to find forage.
  19. About 20,000 elk and 2,600 bison spend the winter in Yellowstone. The Park Service estimates that four bison and 250 elk died in the fires, which simply forced most big mammals into different parts of the park to find forage.
  20. It also allowed me to feel a certain excitement at the thought that if I learned to bugle, an elk might take me for an elk.
  21. It also allowed me to feel a certain excitement at the thought that if I learned to bugle, an elk might take me for an elk.
  22. Careful monitoring of animals and their habitat has enabled tribal wildlife managers to sell about 50 permits a year for bull elk, at $15,000 each.
  23. The Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation of Missoula, Mont., announced Friday that it will start a special fund toward expanding winter range for Yellowstone's elk herd.
  24. How would you assess your first 100 days so far? Rangers are dragging and trucking away roadside carcasses of bison and elk to prevent clashes between tourists and scavenging grizzly bears.
  25. Studies of carcasses this spring indicated that most of the dead elk were either elderly or calves.
  26. Game is plentiful: wild duck, grouse, pheasant, elk and reindeer.
  27. More than half of the Yellowsone elk herd remains outside the park.
  28. Tore Haugen - a Norwegian forestry worker - is trying to wow visitors to the Lillehammer Winter Olympics by selling them ear-rings made from dried elk excrement. 'They're dark brown, oval-shaped and no two are alike,' he says.
  29. Only a few hundred elk out of several thousand died in the fires.
  30. The motion of lifting the tube to your mouth to call again, however, is ample clue to any elk that you are a fake.
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