Crossword clues for primate
primate
- Perhaps man's prudish friend married only once
- Talk pointlessly about setter's ape
- Gibbon or gorilla
- Man, e.g
- Subject for Jane Goodall
- Monkey, e.g
- Mandrill, for one
- Man or monkey
- Man or ape
- Type of mammal
- Ape, e.g
- Zoo category
- Word from the Latin for "dignitary"
- Person, e.g
- Orang, for instance
- Most evolved mammal
- Man (or monkey)
- Lemur, e.g
- Lemur or gorilla
- Gorilla or lemur
- Ape — cleric
- Ape — archbishop
- Man or mandrill
- Man, for one
- Anthropoid
- Subject of evolutionary study
- Episcopal leader
- Human, for one
- Person, e.g.
- Has good eyesight and flexible hands and feet
- A senior clergyman
- Any placental mammal of the order Primates
- Archbishop, e.g
- Archbishop, e.g.
- Top-ranking bishop
- Human being or lemur
- Ape or monkey
- Gibbon or mandrill
- Man, e.g.
- Gibbon, for one, a senior cleric
- Chief bishop
- Archbishop is formal at start of evensong
- Archbishop of York, for example
- Ape an archbishop?
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Primate \Pri"mate\, n. [OE. primat, F. primat, L. primas, -atis one of the first, chief, fr. primus the first. See Prime, a.]
The chief ecclesiastic in a national church; one who presides over other bishops in a province; an archbishop.
(Zo["o]l.) One of the Primates.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"high bishop," c.1200, from Old French primat and directly from Medieval Latin primatem (nominative primas) "church primate," noun use of Late Latin adjective primas "of the first rank, chief, principal," from primus "first" (see prime (adj.)).\n
\nMeaning "animal of the biological order including monkeys and humans" is attested from 1876, from Modern Latin Primates (Linnæus), from Latin primas; so called from supposedly being the "highest" order of mammals (originally also including bats).
Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. 1 (context zoology English) A mammal of the order ''Primates'', including simians and prosimians. 2 (context informal English) A simian anthropoid; an ape, human or monkey. Etymology 2
n. 1 (context ecclesiastical English) In the Catholic Church, a rare title conferred to or claimed by the sees of certain archbishops, or the highest-ranking bishop of a present or historical, usually political circumscription. 2 (context ecclesiastical English) In the Anglican Church, an archbishop, or the highest-ranking bishop of an ecclesiastic province.
WordNet
n. a senior clergyman and dignitary [syn: archpriest, hierarch, high priest, prelate]
any placental mammal of the order Primates; has good eyesight and flexible hands and feet
Wikipedia
Primate (pronounced ) is a title or rank bestowed on some archbishops in certain Christian churches. Depending on the particular tradition, it can denote either jurisdictional authority ( title of authority) or ceremonial precedence ( title of honour).
A primate is a mammal of the order Primates ( Latin: "prime, first rank"). In taxonomy, primates include two distinct lineages, strepsirrhines and haplorhines. Primates arose from ancestors that lived in the trees of tropical forests; many primate characteristics represent adaptations to life in this challenging three-dimensional environment. Most primate species remain at least partly arboreal.
With the exception of humans, who inhabit every continent except for Antarctica, most primates live in tropical or subtropical regions of the Americas, Africa and Asia. They range in size from Madame Berthe's mouse lemur, which weighs only , to the eastern gorilla, weighing over . Based on fossil evidence, the earliest known true primates, represented by the genus Teilhardina, date to 55.8 million years old. An early close primate relative known from abundant remains is the Late Paleocene Plesiadapis, c. 55–58 million years old. Molecular clock studies suggest that the primate branch may be even older, originating near the Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary or around 63–74 mya.
The order Primates was traditionally divided into two main groupings: prosimians and anthropoids (simians). Prosimians have characteristics more like those of the earliest primates, and include the lemurs of Madagascar, lorisoids, and tarsiers. Simians include monkeys, apes and hominins. More recently, taxonomists have preferred to split primates into the suborder Strepsirrhini, or wet-nosed primates, consisting of non-tarsier prosimians, and the suborder Haplorhini, or dry-nosed primates, consisting of tarsiers and the simians.
Simians are divided into two groups: catarrhine (narrow-nosed) monkeys and apes of Africa and southeastern Asia and platyrrhine ("flat-nosed") or New World monkeys of South and Middle America. Catarrhines consist of Old World monkeys (such as baboons and macaques), gibbons and great apes; New World monkeys include the capuchin, howler and squirrel monkeys. Humans are the only extant catarrhines to have spread successfully outside of Africa, South Asia, and East Asia, although fossil evidence shows many other species were formerly present in Europe. New primate species are still being discovered. More than 25 species were taxonomically described in the decade of the 2000s and eleven have been described since 2010.
Considered generalist mammals, primates exhibit a wide range of characteristics. Some primates (including some great apes and baboons) are primarily terrestrial rather than arboreal, but all species possess adaptations for climbing trees. Locomotion techniques used include leaping from tree to tree, walking on two or four limbs, knuckle-walking, and swinging between branches of trees ( brachiation).
Primates are characterized by large brains relative to other mammals, as well as an increased reliance on stereoscopic vision at the expense of smell, the dominant sensory system in most mammals. These features are more developed in monkeys and apes and noticeably less so in lorises and lemurs. Three-color vision has developed in some primates. Most also have opposable thumbs and some have prehensile tails. Many species are sexually dimorphic; differences include body mass, canine tooth size, and coloration. Primates have slower rates of development than other similarly sized mammals and reach maturity later, but have longer lifespans. Depending on the species, adults may live in solitude, in mated pairs, or in groups of up to hundreds of members.
A primate is any member of the biologic order of Primates, including monkeys, apes and humanoids.
Primate may also refer to:
''Persons- Primate (bishop), a title/rank bestowed on (arch)bishops within some Christian churches
- Primates (journal), a scientific journal
- Prince primate, a title formerly given in German and Hungarian nations
- Primates or Kodjabashis, local Christian notables in parts of Ottoman Greece, especially the Peloponnese
- Primate's Palace, a palace in Slovakia
- Primate, a village in Saskatchewan, Canada
- A documentary (1974) by Frederick Wiseman
Usage examples of "primate".
During two days the king rejected his application: but sensible, either that this affair might be attended with dangerous consequences, or that in his impatience he had groundlessly accused the primate of malversation in his office, which seems really to have been the case, he at last permitted him to take his seat, and was reconciled to him.
The potto is the most interesting of the primates, from the anatomical point of view.
It was the skeleton, very delicately dissected and reassembled, of his potto, a rare and curious little West African creature, nominally one of the primates, though quiet, slow, harmless, and remarkably affectionate.
It was no doubt my tailless potto, one of the most interesting of the primates: but alas short-lived.
Therefore, when the primate and six bishops protested against the Declaration of Indulgence, James sent them to the Tower.
Miller assembled a team of psychologists to study a two-hour videotape of Jennie signing to her trainer, Pamela Prentiss of the Tufts University Center for Primate Research.
General Introduction to the Study of Decapilation Among the Tertiates of Gondwana as Contrasted with the Primates of Eurasia.
It was their intention to have proceeded farther that day, but their progress was interrupted by an affair between their Albanian guard and the primate of the village.
In addition to Ameslan, chimpanzees and other nonhuman primates are being taught a variety of other gestural languages.
They are followed by the Right Honourable Joseph Hutchinson, lord mayor of Dublin, his lordship the lord mayor of Cork, their worships the mayors of Limerick, Galway, Sligo and Waterford, twentyeight Irish representative peers, sirdars, grandees and maharajahs bearing the cloth of estate, the Dublin Metropolitan Fire Brigade, the chapter of the saints of finance in their plutocratic order of precedence, the bishop of Down and Connor, His Eminence Michael cardinal Logue, archbishop of Armagh, primate of all Ireland, His Grace, the most reverend Dr William Alexander, archbishop of Armagh, primate of all Ireland, the chief rabbi, the presbyterian moderator, the heads of the baptist, anabaptist, methodist and Moravian chapels and the honorary secretary of the society of friends.
Until now, science had known only one higher primate that was nocturnal, the aotus, or night monkey.
With equal haste and violence, the Oriental synod of fifty bishops degraded Cyril and Memnon from their episcopal honors, condemned, in the twelve anathemas, the purest venom of the Apollinarian heresy, and described the Alexandrian primate as a monster, born and educated for the destruction of the church.
The total weight came to around fifty pounds of Biohazard Level 4 liquefying primate.
Metropolitans and Primates, secretly prepared themselves to usurp over their episcopal brethren the same authority which the bishops had so lately assumed above the college of presbyters.
No other primate has that lack of browridge, or that projection from the front of the lower jaw.