Crossword clues for hippo
hippo
- Huge Muddy Waters fan?
- Congo native
- Big-mouthed safari beast
- African beast, for short
- "Hungry" board game animal
- "Hungry, hungry" critter of a kid's game
- "Hungry Hungry" animal in a kids' game
- ''Fantasia'' dancer
- Zoo creature, (briefly)
- Zoo attraction with a big bite
- Zoo attraction for short
- Zambezi wallower
- Zambezi River sight
- Word before drome
- What Gloria is, in the movie "Madagascar"
- Whale's closest living land relative
- Water-loving big African beast
- Wallower in Africa
- Wallower in a Tarzan film
- Tutu-clad heavyweight in "Fantasia"
- Tutu-clad dancer in Disney's "Fantasia"
- Three-ton beast
- Third largest land mammal
- Tasha of "The Backyardigans," for one
- Source of illegal ivory, informally
- Short-legged pachyderm
- Short-legged African beast, informally
- Semiaquatic heavyweight
- Semiaquatic behemoth
- Semi-aquatic and extremely scary beast
- River horse (abbr)
- Rhino's zoo cousin
- Rhino's neighbor at the zoo, maybe
- Peter Potamus, for one
- One wallowing in a zoo pond
- One of the largest land mammals
- Mudhole-loving African beast, for short
- Muddy waters' biggest fan?
- Muddy waters fan
- Massive river creature
- Marble-eating animal in a Milton Bradley game
- Mammoth African mammal (abbr)
- Mammal whose full name means "river horse"
- Large semi-aquatic mammal, briefly
- Large semi-aquatic mammal (abbr)
- Huge river creature
- Gloria, in the animated "Madagascar" films
- Gloria, in "Madagascar"
- Critter with a big mouth
- Congo sight
- Congo River beast
- Congo basin animal
- Big zoo beast
- Big body in Africa
- Big African beast, for short
- Beast that can weigh more than a ton, briefly
- Ballet dancer in "Fantasia"
- Aquatic mammal briefly
- Animal with large tusks
- Animal with a wide yawn
- Animal with a large bite
- Animal whose full name means "river horse"
- Animal born underwater
- African wallower
- African bull or cow
- African beast larger than a rhino
- "Hungry" board game beast
- "Hungry Hungry" board game animal
- "Fantasia" tutu wearer
- 'Fantasia' ballerina
- Zoo heavyweight, informally
- "Fantasia" dancer
- "Fantasia" ballerina
- Swimmer in the Congo
- A big body in Africa
- River resident
- Congo basin denizen
- Hulking herbivore
- Zoo favorite
- Mudhole lover
- African wader
- Zoo heavyweight, briefly
- One with a thick skin
- Animal with a huge yawn
- Gloria in "Madagascar," e.g.
- Critter with foot-long teeth
- One form of the Egyptian god Set
- Zoo heavyweight, for short
- Nile wader
- Land animal whose closest living relatives include whales
- Cetacean's closest relative
- Zoo resident that needs a big tank
- Massive thick-skinned herbivorous animal living in or around rivers of tropical Africa
- River horse, for short
- "Small" river horse?
- St. Augustine's city
- Gloria in "Madagascar," e.g
- African wallower (abbr)
- Muddy beast, one very quietly entering house
- Creature in river?
- Cool Italian banker’s thick-skinned customer
- Stylish seaman in Augustine's place?
- Statesmanship and politics together encapsulate this big beast
- Semi-aquatic mammal
- Nile animal, for short
- Native African transported by ship, possibly
- Large wallower
- Large semi-aquatic pachyderm
- Large mammal, for short
- Large mammal, in short
- Large African mammal, in short
- Animal in cool river
- Big beast in Italian river
- Beast one very quietly smuggled into house
- Tropical African mud wallower
- Thick-skinned creature getting potty after joint
- Thick-skinned animal, one very quietly entering house
- Zoo attraction, briefly
- Safari sighting, for short
- African animal that may weigh as much as a rhinoceros, for short
- Zoo animal
- Zoo beast
- Large animal that was a ballerina in "Fantasia"
- Zoo critter
- Big zoo attraction?
- Mammoth mammal
- Zoo behemoth
- Safari heavyweight
- Hefty ballerina in "Fantasia"
- Rhino's cousin
- Large herbivore
- Kruger National Park sight
- African heavyweight
- Whale relative
- Two-ton beast
- Tutu wearer in "Fantasia"
- Sandra Boynton critter
- Hungry, hungry game animal
- Hungry critter of a kid's game
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
hippo \hip"po\ n. Same as hippopotamus.
Syn: hippopotamus, river horse, Hippopotamus amphibius.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
short for hippopotamus, attested from 1872.
Wiktionary
n. Short form of hippopotamus.
Wikipedia
A hippo or hippopotamus is either of two species of large African mammal which live mainly in and near water:
- Hippopotamus
- Pygmy Hippopotamus
Hippo may also refer to:
Hippo was a Greek woman mentioned by the 1st century AD Latin author Valerius Maximus as an example of chastity. She was also included among the Famous Women written about by Giovanni Boccaccio in the 14th century.
Hippo (; , Hippon; fl. 5th century BC) was a Pre-Socratic Greek philosopher. He is variously described as coming from Rhegium, Metapontum, Samos, and Croton, and it is possible that there was more than one philosopher with this name.
Although he was a natural philosopher, Aristotle refused to place him among the other great Pre-Socratic philosophers "because of the paltriness of his thought." At some point Hippo was accused of atheism, but as his works have perished, we cannot be certain why. He was accused of impiety by the comic poet Cratinus in his Panoptae, and, according to Clement of Alexandria, Hippo supposedly ordered the following couplet to be inscribed on his tomb:
According to Hippolytus, Hippo held water and fire to be the primary elements, with fire originating from water, and then developing itself by generating the universe. Simplicius, too, says that Hippo thought that water was the principle of all things. Most of the accounts of his philosophy suggest that he was interested in biological matters. He thought that there is an appropriate level of moisture in all living things, and disease is caused when the moisture is out of balance. He also viewed the soul as arising from both mind and water. A medieval scholium on Aristophanes' The Clouds attributes to Hippo the view that the heavens were like the dome of an oven covering the Earth.
Hippo is the name of a fictional supervillain appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Usage examples of "hippo".
Eight years, however, elapsed, from the evacuation of Hippo to the reduction of Carthage.
Glass remnants of Gekko towns shone amid silent green swamps and marshes inhabited by herds of hippos who were busily converting the greenery into fish food and fertilizer.
The previous owner must have been fat as a hippo and probably diabetic: her glycogen index was absurd and her phosphines were wild.
Then I being thus handled by them, and driven away, got me into a corner of the stable, where while I remembred their uncurtesie, and how on the morrow I should return to Lucius by the help of a Rose, when as I thought to revenge my selfe of myne owne horse, I fortuned to espy in the middle of a pillar sustaining the rafters of the stable the image of the goddesse Hippone, which was garnished and decked round about with faire and fresh roses : then in hope of present remedy, I leaped up with my fore feet as high as I could, stretching out my neck, and with my lips coveting to snatch some roses.
Hasdrubal sent a swift ship flying along the shore of the Mediterranean to where Hamilcar, the last scion of the Barcas, a family long since fallen from power and politics, lay with a war fleet of fifty-seven great ships off Hippo on the north African coast.
Now, as light stayed longer every day, the bears and hyaenas and bony hippos, the lonely alopex and the apes, lay stilltensely, it seemedfor hours, watching the passers-by from their scrubbed-brick cells and their muddy trenches.
Tessa and a woman named Birgit, who works for an independently funded pharma-watch outfit called Hippo based in a small town called Bielefeld in north Germany.
BUKO Pharma-Kampagne of Bielefeld in Germany--not to be confused with Hippo in my novel--is an independently financed, undermanned body of sane, well-qualified people who struggle to expose the misdeeds of the pharmaceutical industry, particularly in its dealings with the Third World.
He continued staring at the German as the bellowing of the hippos began again.
Rice, raising his voice as the chorus of hippos started up once again.
But though there were great herbivores to fill the roles of antelopes, elephants, hippos, and wildebeests, and predators who hunted like lions, cheetahs, and hyenas, these animals were more closely related to birds than to any mammal.
In Africa there were archaic-looking long-necked giant herbivores and creatures like hippos with fat, low-slung bodies and powerfully clawed thumbs.
And what would later be considered tropical animals could be found in North America, Europe, and Asia: In England, the Thames was broad and swampy, and hippos and elephants basked on its floodplain.
In eastern Europe and Asia there were hippos, wild sheep, and goat, red, roe, and fallow deer, boar, asses, wolves, hyenas, and jackals.
This pool was the ideal haunt of both hippos and crocodiles, and Claudia Monterro was in it up to her waist.