odonate
English
Etymology
From translingual Odonata, from Ancient Greek ὀδούς (odoús, “tooth”), apparently because they have teeth on their mandibles, although most insects have toothed mandibles.
Noun
odonate (plural odonates)
- Any carnivorous insect of the order Odonata; a dragonfly or damselfly.
- 1980, Gordon H. Orians, Some Adaptations of Marsh-nesting Blackbirds, page 246:
- The proportion of these prey that were odonates can be estimated from the food sample data taken at the Potholes (Chapter Four; Orians and Horn, 1969).
- 2009, Dennis Paulson, Dragonflies and Damselflies of the West, page 35:
- Thanks to concern about water birds, these activities have slowed in some regions, and mitigation efforts have provided new wetlands, some of them quite good for odonates.
- 2013, Jill Lancaster, Barbara J. Downes, Aquatic Entomology, page 144:
- Aspects of such 'smart engineering' are found also in fossil odonates from the mid-Carboniferous, indicating that versatile flight was developed some 80-100 million years ago (Wootton et al. 1988).
Synonyms
- (any species of order Odonata): dragonfly (used loosely, technically incorrect)
Translations
carnivore insect
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