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TOEFL BNC: 14069 COCA: 11025

mammoth

1 mammoth /ˈmæməθ/ noun
plural mammoths
1 mammoth
/ˈmæməθ/
noun
plural mammoths
Learner's definition of MAMMOTH
[count]
: a type of large, hairy elephant that lived in ancient times and that had very long tusks that curved upward猛犸;长毛象
: something that is very large庞然大物
2 mammoth /ˈmæməθ/ adjective
2 mammoth
/ˈmæməθ/
adjective
Learner's definition of MAMMOTH
[more mammoth; most mammoth]
: very large庞大的;巨大的
TOEFL BNC: 14069 COCA: 11025

mammoth

1 of 2

noun

mam·​moth ˈma-məth How to pronounce mammoth (audio)
1
: any of a genus (Mammuthus) of extinct Pleistocene mammals of the elephant family distinguished from recent elephants by highly ridged molars, usually large size, very long tusks that curve upward, and well-developed body hair
2
: something immense of its kind
the company is a mammoth of the industry

mammoth

2 of 2

adjective

: of very great size
Choose the Right Synonym for mammoth

enormous, immense, huge, vast, gigantic, colossal, mammoth mean exceedingly large.

enormous and immense both suggest an exceeding of all ordinary bounds in size or amount or degree, but enormous often adds an implication of abnormality or monstrousness.

an enormous expense
an immense shopping mall

huge commonly suggests an immensity of bulk or amount.

incurred a huge debt

vast usually suggests immensity of extent.

the vast Russian steppes

gigantic stresses the contrast with the size of others of the same kind.

a gigantic sports stadium

colossal applies especially to a human creation of stupendous or incredible dimensions.

a colossal statue of Lincoln

mammoth suggests both hugeness and ponderousness of bulk.

a mammoth boulder

Example Sentences

Noun even as sport-utility vehicles go, that one is a mammoth Adjective Renovating the house is a mammoth undertaking. a mammoth book with color plates of birds native to North America
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
The unearthing of the mammoth proved the existence of a time before time. Jill Lepore, The New Yorker, 7 Aug. 2022 The roughly 37,000-year-old remains of a female mammoth and her calf show distinct signs of butchering, providing new evidence that humans may have arrived in North America much earlier than believed. Ashley Strickland, CNN, 4 Aug. 2022 In contrast to the in utero years needed by a mammoth, the thylacine may only need a few weeks. John Timmer, Ars Technica, 16 Aug. 2022 It was preserved beneath the adult mammoth’s skull and tusks. Tom Metcalfe, NBC News, 4 Aug. 2022 There’s also profound meaning for the Trʼondëk Hwëchʼin people, the Yukon First Nation whose territory the mammoth died in, Zazula said. Christine Chung, BostonGlobe.com, 2 July 2022 The last mammoth, for instance, died after the first pyramids were built. Peter Brannen, The Atlantic, 22 June 2022 To recover the mammoth, Zazula turned to two geologists, one with the Yukon Geological Survey and another with the University of Calgary. Diane Selkirk, Smithsonian Magazine, 8 July 2022 The government said miners working at Eureka Creek uncovered the mammoth while excavating through the permafrost. Rachel Paik, Fox News, 28 June 2022
Adjective
All were filmed here, with interiors being shot on one of four mammoth soundstages, and exteriors spread out over 120 acres of rural woods and farmland. Dalton Ross, EW.com, 8 Sep. 2022 The mammoth sale is a shot in the arm for Beverly Hills, which has seen its usual slate of $20-million sales in 2022 but hasn’t quite reached the staggering sums of its neighbors such as Bel-Air or Beverly Park. Jack Flemming, Los Angeles Times, 7 Sep. 2022 The mammoth settlement comes as the company continues its fight for survival with the US Food and Drug Administration. Beth Mole, Ars Technica, 7 Sep. 2022 There’s an impending cascade of woes: A mammoth cost-of-living crisis is driving a historic drop in living standards. Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 5 Sep. 2022 For some of the uninsured or underinsured, the mammoth Vaccines for Children program could take on providing COVID-19 shots given to kids. Alexander Tin, CBS News, 2 Sep. 2022 Savings on high-end London properties can seem mammoth. J.s. Marcus, WSJ, 1 Sep. 2022 That date will enter the sponsor in the youngest-mammoth contest. Ned Rozell, Anchorage Daily News, 27 Aug. 2022 The mammoth offensive lineman from Oklahoma was just getting around to taking care of personal business on Thursday, even after a light practice. José M. Romero, The Arizona Republic, 26 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Noun

borrowed from Dutch mammut, mammuth, borrowed from 17th-century Russian mamant, probably borrowed from a presumed compound in Mansi (Finno-Ugric language of western Siberia), in modern dialects māŋ-āńt, mē̮ŋ-ońt, mā͔ŋ-ont, mā͔ŋ-ā͔ńt, literally, "earth horn," referring to tusks of the wooly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenius) found in arctic and subarctic Siberia

Note: The Russian word mamant, later mamont "mammoth" is first attested as a component of the possessive adjective mamantovŭ, occurring in the phrases mamantova kostĭ "mammoth bone" (1578, in the account books of the Antonievo-Sijskij Monastery in the far north of European Russia) and rogŭ mamantovŭ "mammoth horn" (1609, in a list of Siberian exports). The earliest known Western European reflection of this phrase is apparently in communications from employees of the London-based Muscovy Company. Richard Finch, a member of an expedition to the Pechora River in 1611, wrote in a letter to the company that "… being at Pechora [Pustozersk], Oust Zilma, or any of those parts, there is in the Winter time to bee had among the Samoyeds, Elephants teeth, which they sell in pieces according as they get it, and not by weight …It is called in Russe, Mamanta Kaost" (Purchas His Pilgrimes …The Third Part, London, 1625, pp. 537-38). A more detailed definition is found in a glossary of Russian words collected by Richard James (1591-1638), chaplain to an English embassy to Muscovy, who spent the winter of 1618-19 at Kholmogory, inland from Arkhangel'sk on the White Sea: "maimanto, as they say a sea eleφant, which is never seene, but according to the Samȣites [Samoyeds] he workes himself under grownde and so they finde his teeth or bones in Pechore and Nova Zemla, of which they make table men [chess pieces] in Russia" (B.A. Larin, Russko-anglijskij slovar'-dnevnik Ričarda Džemsa (1618-1619 gg.), Leningrad, 1959, pp. 181-82). Neither of these attestations had any impact on later scientific discourse on the mammoth, or the future of the word in English; James' word book, an important source for early modern spoken Russian, was scarcely known before the 20th century, and not published in its entirety until 1959. More influential were forms somehow transmitted without the n, which first appear in the writing of the Dutch statesman and scholar Nicolaas Witsen (1641-1717). Witsen visited Russia in 1664-65, reaching Moscow, but not the regions where mammoth tusks were found, and the identity of his informant is uncertain. He rendered mamantova kostĭ as Mammotekoos in an incidental reference in his work on shipbuilding (Aeloude en hedendaegsche scheeps-bouw en bestier, Amsterdam, 1671; 2nd edition, 1690). He describes how, on the banks of rivers "in a certain region of Muscovy" ("in zeeker Moskovisch gewest"), waters would expose "heavy tusks, which people judged to be from elephants, washed there at the time of the Deluge and covered with earth; they were called Mammotekoos by the Russians, Mammot meaning in Russian a large terrible beast and koos bone" ("swaere tanden, die men oordeelt van Olifanten te zijn, ten tijde des zuntvloets daar gespoelt en met aerde overstolpt : zy worden by de Russen Mammotekoos genaemt, Mammot is gesegt op Rus een groot vervaerlijck dier en voos [i.e., koos] been" [p. 3]). Witsen added much more information in Noord en Oost Tartarye (1692), a massive compilation on the geography and history of Inner Eurasia; the words are now rendered Mammout and Mammouttekoos, and the tusks reported to have been found most often on the Ob' River in Siberia and the sea coasts ("Aen de Oby en Zee-kusten worden ze 't meest gevonden …"). Witsen's books had very limited circulation. This was not the case, however, with the report of another traveler, the Holstein-born merchant and entrepreneur Evert Ysbrants Ides (1657-1712 or 13), who traversed Siberia in 1692-93 as part of a trade mission to China sent by the Russian tsar Peter. Ides is presumed to have accompanied the tsar to Amsterdam in 1697-98. There, under the auspices, and perhaps editorship, of Witsen, his account of the journey became the book Driejaarige Reize naar China, published in 1704; translations soon appeared in English (1706) and German (1707). Ides spelled the word mammut and mammuth—the latter, adopted in the English translation, most likely the source of the th spelling in English. The ulterior origin of Russian mamant, mamont has provoked much discussion, summarized in Marek Stachowski's article "Das Wort Mammut in etymologischen Wörterbüchern," Folia Orientalia, vol. 36 (2000), pp. 301-14. The Mansi etymology above was first proposed by Michel Heaney, "The Implications of Richard James's maimanto," Oxford Slavonic Papers, vol. 9 (1976), pp. 102-09; it was amplified and corrected by the Uralic specialist Evgenij Xelimskij (Eugene Helimski) in "Rossica: ètimologičeskie zametki," Issledovanija po istoričeskoj grammatike i leksikologii, Moscow, 1990, pp. 30-42. Note that the proposed Mansi compound would exactly parallel the compound jǡ-n'ǡ͔mt "mammoth tusk," literally "land horn," in the Samoyedic language Nenets.

Adjective

derivative of mammoth entry 1

First Known Use

Noun

1706, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Adjective

1801, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of mammoth was in 1706
TOEFL BNC: 14069 COCA: 11025

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