chevreuil
English
Noun
chevreuil (plural chevreuils)
- A roe deer, a roebuck.
- 1840, Sporting Magazine - Volume 95, page 306:
- We found a chevreuil, and, could we have got him once out of the covert, no doubt should have had an excellent run towards Mortefontaine; but as he was determined not to go straight away, and we were not strong enough to make him, after a short gallop we gave it up.
- 1873, Fitzgerald's Life and Adventures of Alexander Dumas, “Chambers's Journal”, in (Please provide the book title or journal name), volume 50, number 1, page 136:
- Alexander, with some friends, had gone out to shoot a day or two before, and brought home plenty of game; and by seven o'clock Chevet arrived with a salmon of fifty pounds-weight, a chevreuil roasted entire, and served upon a huge silver dish, and a monster pasty.
- 1903, Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Adgate Lipscomb, Albert Ellery Bergh, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson - Volume 6, page 21:
- I have convinced him that our deer is not a Chevreuil, and would you believe that many letters to different acquaintances in Virginia, where this animal is so common, have never enabled me to present him with a large pair of their horns,
- 1935, Earnest Hemmingway, Green Hills of Africa:
- Well, the last night we were in Paris I'd been out shooting at Ben Gallagher's in the Sologne the day before and he had a fermée, you know, they put up a low fence while they're out feeding, and shot rabbits in the morning and in the afternoon we had several drives and shot pheasants and I shot a chevreuil.
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French chevruel, chevrol, from Latin capreolus.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ʃə.vʁœj/
Audio (file)
Noun
chevreuil m (plural chevreuils)
- roe deer, roebuck
- (Canada, Missouri, New England, Louisiana) any of various local species of deer in the genus Odocoileus; mostly the white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus)
Derived terms
Related terms
Descendants
- → English: chevreuil
Further reading
- “chevreuil”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Anagrams
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