Spyke
sh.itjust.works

Wait until you find out the depth of creativity contained in the naming of the "rhinoceros".

12
someguy3reply
lemmy.world

The word rhinoceros is derived through Latin from the Ancient Greek: ῥῑνόκερως, which is composed of ῥῑνο- (rhino-, "nose") and κέρας (keras, "horn") with a horn on the nose. The name has been in use since the 14th century.[8]

Little harder than uni and corn but still good

15

To be fair, it's a little easier if you're in the medical field, because rhino- is actually used as a medical prefix

An ear, nose, throat doctor's full title is actually Otorhinolaryngology

4

Means you can make up your own animals with horns in silly places and in arbitrary numbering:

Tesseracephaceros, for example. I'm no etymologist but I think he's got four horns on his head.

2

unicorn (n.) early 13c., from Old French unicorne, from Late Latin unicornus (Vulgate), from noun use of Latin unicornis (adj.) "having one horn," from uni- "one" (from PIE root *oi-no- "one, unique") + cornus "horn" (from PIE root *ker- (1) "horn; head").

The Late Latin word translates Greek monoceros, itself rendering Hebrew re'em (Deuteronomy xxxiii.17 and elsewhere), which probably was a kind of wild ox. According to Pliny, a creature with a horse's body, deer's head, elephant's feet, lion's tail, and one black horn two cubits long projecting from its forehead. Compare German Einhorn, Welsh ungorn, Breton uncorn, Old Church Slavonic ino-rogu. Old English used anhorn as a loan-translation of Latin unicornis.

also from early 13c.

10

According to Pliny, a creature with a horse's body, deer's head, elephant's feet, lion's tail, and one black horn two cubits long projecting from its forehead

That’s a pretty good description of Elasmotherium.

Pliny should have missed the last Elasmotherium by like 100,000 years, though, give or take a few years.

5
xoggyreply
programming.dev

The post is in the positives so I think you're ok. If I had to guess on the downvotes though it's not really a groundbreaking discovery that uni-corn can be broken into two words like that.

3

28 up 18 down so far!

I always took unicorn as one word, I never thought about the uni part meaning one.

-1

Butt Stallion from Borderlands was a bicorn in fact, not a unicorn

2

You reached the end

The word Unicorn is uni-corn, as in one corn(horn). | Spyke