three-banded armadillo
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Noun: A small, burrowing mammal native to South America, characterized by its distinctive protective armor consisting of three movable bands of bony plates. It is the only species of armadillo capable of rolling itself into a complete, tight ball for defense.
Examples
- The three-banded armadillo is famous for its unique defensive ability to curl into a perfect sphere.
- In the grasslands of Brazil, you might spot a three-banded armadillo searching for insects.
- Unlike other armadillos, the three-banded armadillo has a shell with three clear, flexible bands.
Advanced Usage
- The term is used in zoological and conservation contexts to refer specifically to the species (Southern three-banded armadillo) and its close relative (Brazilian three-banded armadillo).
- It can be used metaphorically to describe something or someone that is well-protected or that retreats into itself completely.
- Under criticism, the politician became like a three-banded armadillo, offering no openings for further questions.
Variants and Related Words
- Armadillo (n): The general name for the family of armored placental mammals to which the three-banded armadillo belongs.
- Tolypeutes (n): The biological genus name for the three-banded armadillos.
- Ball armadillo (n): A common name referring to the same animal, highlighting its rolling defense mechanism.
Synonyms
- Ball armadillo
- Apar (a regional name used in parts of South America)
Related Idioms or Phrases
- To roll up like an armadillo: To withdraw or become defensive. While this idiom uses the general term "armadillo," the three-banded armadillo is the archetype for this behavior.
- When the debate got heated, he just rolled up like an armadillo and stopped listening.
Noun
- South American armadillo with three bands of bony plates