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Pygarg

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The pygarg (/ˈpaɪgɑːg/[1]) is an animal mentioned in the Bible in Deuteronomy 14:5 as one of the animals permitted for food. The Septuagint translates the Hebrew Template:Transl (דישון) as Template:Transl in Koiné Greek ("white-rumped", from Template:Transl "buttocks" and Template:Transl "white"),[1] and the King James Version takes from there its term pygarg.

Henry Baker Tristram (1867) proposed it to be the Saharan antelope addax and described it as "a large animal, over 3½ feet high at the shoulder, and, with its gently-twisted horns, 2½ feet long. Its colour is pure white, with the exception of a short black mane, and a tinge of tawny on the shoulders and back".[2]

Outside the biblical use, the term was also applied to the Siberian roe deer in the 18th century,[3] whose specific name is pygargus in scientific Latin.

References

  1. ^ a b "pygarg". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ Henry Baker Tristram, The Natural History of the Bible (1867).
  3. ^ Pallas, P.S. (1793). Voyages du professeur Pallas, dans plusieurs provinces de l'Empire de Russie et dans l'Asie septentrionale (in Latin and French). p. 25.