Find the word definition

Crossword clues for goral

The Collaborative International Dictionary
Goral

Goral \Go"ral\, n. (Zo["o]l.) An Indian goat antelope ( Nemorhedus goral), resembling the chamois.

Wiktionary
goral

n. A type of Asian ungulate ruminant, now defined as any of the four species of the genus ''Naemorhedus''.

WordNet
goral

n. small goat antelope with small conical horns; of southern Asian mountains [syn: Naemorhedus goral]

Wikipedia
Goral (disambiguation)

Goral may refer to:

  • Four species of Asian ungulates in the genus Naemorhedus.
  • The Gorals, a people living in southern Poland, northern Slovakia and the Czech Republic.
People with the last name Goral
  • Sigrid Goral (born 1952), German Olympic swimmer
  • Boleslaus Goral
Goral

The gorals are four species in the genus Nemorhaedus or Naemorhedus. They are small ungulates with a goat-like or antelope-like appearance.

The original name is based on Latin nemor-haedus, from nemus, nemoris 'grove' and haedus 'little goat', but was misspelt Naemorhedus by Hamilton Smith (1827).

Until recently, this genus also contained the serow species (now in genus Capricornis). The name "goral" comes from an eastern Indian word for the Himalayan goral. The four species of gorals are:

  • The Himalayan goral (also known as ghural), Naemorhedus goral, is native to northwestern and northeastern India, as well as Nepal and Bhutan.
  • The long-tailed goral, Naemorhedus caudatus, can be found in eastern Russia and China through western Thailand and eastern Myanmar. A population has also been documented in the Demilitarized Zone on the Korean Peninsula.
  • The red goral, Naemorhedus baileyi, inhabits areas from the Yunnan province of China, to Tibet and northeastern India through northern Myanmar.
  • The Chinese goral, Naemorhedus griseus, is distributed through Burma, China, India, Thailand, Vietnam, and possibly Laos.

Gorals are often found on rocky hillsides at high elevations. Though their territories often coincide with those of the closely related serow, the goral will usually be found on higher, steeper slopes with less vegetation.

Gorals typically weigh 25-40 kg and are 80-130 cm in length, with short, backward-facing horns. Coloration differs between species and individuals, but generally ranges from light gray to dark red-brown, with lighter patches on the chest, throat, and underside, and a dark stripe down the spine. They have woolly undercoats covered by longer, coarser hair, which helps to protect them in the cold areas where they are often found.

Though the groups share many similarities, gorals are stockier than antelopes and have broader, heavier hooves. Female gorals have four functional teats, while female goats and sheep have only two functional teats. Unlike serows, gorals have no working preorbital glands.

Usage examples of "goral".

There they were, smaller by weight and length than the lone crocodile that lurked two hundred yards downstream near a watering hole, hopelessly outmatched in every physical aspect by the great tiger that sometimes came from the lower jungles to hunt the stately sambur and wiry goral, and the elusive serow.

It was usually small things like snow hares and red-legged partridges, but once in a while something larger, like a goral or an urial, and we cooked plain and simple meals of boiled or broiled meat, served blessedly sauceless.