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All boar synonyms

boar
B b

noun boar

  • pig — an earthenware crock, pot, pitcher, or jar.
  • swine — any stout, cloven-hoofed artiodactyl of the Old World family Suidae, having a thick hide sparsely covered with coarse hair, a disklike snout, and an often short, tasseled tail: now of worldwide distribution and hunted or raised for its meat and other products. Compare hog, pig1 , wild boar.
  • piglet — a little pig.
  • hog — a hoofed mammal of the family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine.
  • pig — an earthenware crock, pot, pitcher, or jar.
  • sow — to scatter (seed) over land, earth, etc., for growth; plant.
  • razorback — a finback or rorqual.
  • shoat — Also, shote. a young, weaned pig.
  • porker — a pig, especially one being fattened for its meat.
  • piggy — a small or young pig.
  • warthog — an African wild swine, Phacochoerus aethiopicus, having large tusks and warty protuberances on the face.
  • peccary — any of several piglike hoofed mammals of the genus Tayassu, of North and South America, as T. tajacu (collared peccary, or javelina) having a dark gray coat with a white collar.
  • beast — You can refer to an animal as a beast, especially if it is a large, dangerous, or unusual one.
  • brute — If you call someone, usually a man, a brute, you mean that they are rough, violent, and insensitive.
  • pachyderm — any of the thick-skinned, nonruminant ungulates, as the elephant, hippopotamus, and rhinoceros.
  • mammoth — any large, elephantlike mammal of the extinct genus Mammuthus, from the Pleistocene Epoch, having hairy skin and ridged molar teeth.
  • tusker — an animal with tusks, as an elephant or a wild boar.
  • mastodon — a massive, elephantlike mammal of the genus Mammut (Mastodon), that flourished worldwide from the Miocene through the Pleistocene epochs and, in North America, into recent times, having long, curved upper tusks and, in the male, short lower tusks.
  • porky — of, relating to, or resembling pork.
  • wild boar — a wild Old World swine, Sus scrofa, from which most of the domestic hogs are believed to be derived.
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