| livestock |  |  | 
| n. (animal) | 1. farm animal, livestock, stock | any animals kept for use or profit. | 
|  | ~ eutherian, eutherian mammal, placental, placental mammal | mammals having a placenta; all mammals except monotremes and marsupials. | 
|  | ~ carry | be able to feed.; "This land will carry ten cows to the acre" | 
| beast |  |  | 
| n. (tops) | 1. animal, animate being, beast, brute, creature, fauna | a living organism characterized by voluntary movement. | 
|  | ~ organism, being | a living thing that has (or can develop) the ability to act or function independently. | 
|  | ~ ritual killing, sacrifice | the act of killing (an animal or person) in order to propitiate a deity. | 
|  | ~ tracking, trailing | the pursuit (of a person or animal) by following tracks or marks they left behind. | 
|  | ~ animal kingdom, animalia, kingdom animalia | taxonomic kingdom comprising all living or extinct animals. | 
|  | ~ pest | any unwanted and destructive insect or other animal that attacks food or crops or livestock etc..; "he sprayed the garden to get rid of pests"; "many pests have developed resistance to the common pesticides" | 
|  | ~ critter | a regional term for `creature' (especially for domestic animals). | 
|  | ~ creepy-crawly | an animal that creeps or crawls (such as worms or spiders or insects). | 
|  | ~ darter | a person or other animal that moves abruptly and rapidly.; "squirrels are darters" | 
|  | ~ peeper | an animal that makes short high-pitched sounds. | 
|  | ~ homeotherm, homoiotherm, homotherm | an animal that has a body temperature that is relatively constant and independent of the environmental temperature. | 
|  | ~ ectotherm, poikilotherm | an animal whose body temperature varies with the temperature of its surroundings; any animal except birds and mammals. | 
|  | ~ range animal | any animal that lives and grazes in the grassy open land of western North America (especially horses, cattle, sheep). | 
|  | ~ varment, varmint | any usually predatory wild animal considered undesirable; e.g., coyote. | 
|  | ~ scavenger | any animal that feeds on refuse and other decaying organic matter. | 
|  | ~ work animal | an animal trained for and used for heavy labor. | 
|  | ~ domestic animal, domesticated animal | any of various animals that have been tamed and made fit for a human environment. | 
|  | ~ feeder | an animal that feeds on a particular source of food.; "a bark feeder"; "a mud feeder" | 
|  | ~ migrator | an animal (especially birds and fish) that travels between different habitats at particular times of the year. | 
|  | ~ molter, moulter | an animal (especially birds and arthropods and reptiles) that periodically shed their outer layer (feathers or cuticle or skin or hair). | 
|  | ~ pet | a domesticated animal kept for companionship or amusement. | 
|  | ~ stayer | a person or other animal having powers of endurance or perseverance.; "the horse that won the race is a good stayer" | 
|  | ~ stunt | a creature (especially a whale) that has been prevented from attaining full growth. | 
|  | ~ marine animal, marine creature, sea animal, sea creature | any of numerous animals inhabiting the sea including e.g. fishes and molluscs and many mammals. | 
|  | ~ female | an animal that produces gametes (ova) that can be fertilized by male gametes (spermatozoa). | 
|  | ~ male | an animal that produces gametes (spermatozoa) that can fertilize female gametes (ova). | 
|  | ~ adult | any mature animal. | 
|  | ~ young, offspring | any immature animal. | 
|  | ~ pureblood, purebred, thoroughbred | a pedigreed animal of unmixed lineage; used especially of horses. | 
|  | ~ giant | any creature of exceptional size. | 
|  | ~ survivor | an animal that survives in spite of adversity.; "only the fittest animals were survivors of the cold winters" | 
|  | ~ mutant | an animal that has undergone mutation. | 
|  | ~ herbivore | any animal that feeds chiefly on grass and other plants.; "horses are herbivores"; "the sauropod dinosaurs were apparently herbivores" | 
|  | ~ insectivore | any organism that feeds mainly on insects. | 
|  | ~ acrodont | an animal having teeth consolidated with the summit of the alveolar ridge without sockets. | 
|  | ~ pleurodont | an animal having teeth fused with the inner surface of the alveolar ridge without sockets. | 
|  | ~ micro-organism, microorganism | any organism of microscopic size. | 
|  | ~ actinomycete | any bacteria (some of which are pathogenic for humans and animals) belonging to the order Actinomycetales. | 
|  | ~ zooplankton | animal constituent of plankton; mainly small crustaceans and fish larvae. | 
|  | ~ conceptus, fertilized egg, embryo | an animal organism in the early stages of growth and differentiation that in higher forms merge into fetal stages but in lower forms terminate in commencement of larval life. | 
|  | ~ chordate | any animal of the phylum Chordata having a notochord or spinal column. | 
|  | ~ invertebrate | any animal lacking a backbone or notochord; the term is not used as a scientific classification. | 
|  | ~ metazoan | any animal of the subkingdom Metazoa; all animals except protozoans and sponges. | 
|  | ~ omnivore | an animal that feeds on both animal and vegetable substances. | 
|  | ~ predatory animal, predator | any animal that lives by preying on other animals. | 
|  | ~ prey, quarry | animal hunted or caught for food. | 
|  | ~ game | animal hunted for food or sport. | 
|  | ~ hexapod | an animal having six feet. | 
|  | ~ biped | an animal with two feet. | 
|  | ~ larva | the immature free-living form of most invertebrates and amphibians and fish which at hatching from the egg is fundamentally unlike its parent and must metamorphose. | 
|  | ~ racer | an animal that races. | 
|  | ~ fictional animal | animals that exist only in fiction (usually in children's stories). | 
|  | ~ trap | a device in which something (usually an animal) can be caught and penned. | 
|  | ~ humaneness | the quality of compassion or consideration for others (people or animals). | 
|  | ~ body, organic structure, physical structure | the entire structure of an organism (an animal, plant, or human being).; "he felt as if his whole body were on fire" | 
|  | ~ animal tissue | the tissue in the bodies of animals. | 
|  | ~ head, caput | the upper part of the human body or the front part of the body in animals; contains the face and brains.; "he stuck his head out the window" | 
|  | ~ side | either the left or right half of a body.; "he had a pain in his side" | 
|  | ~ face | the part of an animal corresponding to the human face. | 
|  | ~ nose | the sense of smell (especially in animals).; "the hound has a good nose" | 
|  | ~ diet | the usual food and drink consumed by an organism (person or animal). | 
|  | ~ transmitter, vector | any agent (person or animal or microorganism) that carries and transmits a disease.; "mosquitos are vectors of malaria and yellow fever"; "fleas are vectors of the plague"; "aphids are transmitters of plant diseases"; "when medical scientists talk about vectors they are usually talking about insects" | 
|  | ~ captive | an animal that is confined. | 
|  | ~ mate | the partner of an animal (especially a sexual partner).; "he loved the mare and all her mates"; "camels hate leaving their mates" | 
|  | ~ sitter | an organism (person or animal) that sits. | 
|  | ~ stander | an organism (person or animal) that stands.; "a crowd of sitters and standers" | 
|  | ~ wart | any small rounded protuberance (as on certain plants or animals). | 
|  | ~ schistosome dermatitis, swimmer's itch | a sensitization reaction to repeated invasion of the skin by cercariae of schistosomes. | 
|  | ~ debone, bone | remove the bones from.; "bone the turkey before roasting it" | 
|  | ~ domesticate, tame | make fit for cultivation, domestic life, and service to humans.; "The horse was domesticated a long time ago"; "The wolf was tamed and evolved into the house dog" | 
|  | ~ domesticise, domesticize, domesticate, tame, reclaim | overcome the wildness of; make docile and tractable.; "He tames lions for the circus"; "reclaim falcons" | 
|  | ~ drench | force to drink. | 
|  | ~ pasture, graze, crop | let feed in a field or pasture or meadow. | 
|  | ~ topknotted, crested, tufted | (of a bird or animal) having a usually ornamental tuft or process on the head; often used in combination.; "golden crested"; "crested iris"; "crested oriole"; "tufted duck"; "tufted loosestrife" | 
|  | ~ bone-covered | (of animals) armored with bone. | 
|  | ~ free-swimming, unattached | (of animals) able to swim about; not attached. | 
|  | ~ hispid | (of animals or plants) having stiff coarse hairs or bristles.; "plants with hispid stems" | 
|  | ~ flesh-eating, meat-eating, zoophagous | (of animals) carnivorous. | 
|  | ~ phytophagic, phytophagous, phytophilous, plant-eating | (of animals) feeding on plants. | 
|  | ~ all-devouring | (of animals) both plant-eating and flesh-eating. | 
|  | ~ insectivorous | (of animals and plants) feeding on insects. | 
|  | ~ epizootic | (of animals) epidemic among animals of a single kind within a particular region.; "an epizootic disease" | 
|  | ~ adult, full-grown, fully grown, grown, grownup, big | (of animals) fully developed.; "an adult animal"; "a grown woman" | 
|  | ~ half-blooded, half-bred, half-breed | (of animals) having only one purebred parent. | 
|  | ~ registered | (of animals) officially recorded with or certified by a recognized breed association; especially in a stud book.; "a registered Percheron" | 
|  | ~ unregistered | (of animals) not recorded with or certified by an official breed association.; "unregistered dairy cattle" | 
|  | ~ gregarious | (of animals) tending to form a group with others of the same species.; "gregarious bird species" | 
|  | ~ social | tending to move or live together in groups or colonies of the same kind.; "ants are social insects" | 
| n. (person) | 2. beast, brute, savage, wildcat, wolf | a cruelly rapacious person. | 
|  | ~ aggressor, assailant, assaulter, attacker | someone who attacks. | 
| brute |  |  | 
| adj. | 1. beastly, bestial, brutal, brute, brutish | resembling a beast; showing lack of human sensibility.; "beastly desires"; "a bestial nature"; "brute force"; "a dull and brutish man"; "bestial treatment of prisoners" | 
|  | ~ inhumane | lacking and reflecting lack of pity or compassion.; "humans are innately inhumane; this explains much of the misery and suffering in the world"; "biological weapons are considered too inhumane to be used" | 
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