| 释义 | 
		Definition of ocelot in English: ocelotnoun ˈɒsɪlɒtˈəʊsɪlɒt 1A medium-sized wild cat that has an orange-yellow coat marked with black stripes and spots, native to South and Central America. 虎猫 Felis pardalis, family Felidae Example sentencesExamples -  An ocelot has eyes on its skin, but that is purely coincidental; the word comes from the Nahuatl word ocelotl, a jaguar.
 -  His property is ideal because it's next to the wildlife refuge that's home to the 100 ocelots remaining in the region.
 -  This is an ocelot from Central and South America.
 -  In fact, he had a lion, an ocelot, and a boa constrictor during his playing days.
 -  And the black girl had been watching her with the unblinking intensity of an ocelot ever since taking her position.
 -  He paces the bow, cramped as it is, like the caged ocelot or the little peccary leashed to a cleat.
 -  We were studying ocelots at the time and needed chickens to lure the cats into our traps.
 -  Clearly, bobcats could survive hunting pressures better than margays and ocelots.
 -  As Erian had said, just as the ocelot ran off into the forest the poachers came at him, four of them.
 -  She walked over to Seria, a large ocelot, who began purring as she came near.
 -  Near a remote salina, a brackish water hole, the tracks of ocelots and lesser anteaters dimpled the shoreline.
 -  They say it's like the link between the small ocelot and the large cats like the lion and tiger.
 -  Durst, who once nourished his profile by toting an ocelot, would sell his clubs as soon as they got popular.
 -  Roadkill has knocked an endangered cat, the ocelot, down to about 80 individuals in the U.S.
 -  We estimate that fewer than 100 ocelots remain in the U.S., all in south Texas.
 -  For a small donation, people receive an information packet and can ‘adopt’ one of the radio-collared ocelots.
 -  After about ten minutes, the little ocelot returns with two plates full of steaming meat and vegetables.
 -  This spring, enjoy the sound of success - the low purr of a rare ocelot kitten.
 -  He doesn't have big teeth so he wouldn't be able to protect himself against eagles, jaguars, and ocelots in central South America.
 -  I had an amazing few weeks in the rainforest with him, being shown the forest through an ocelot's eyes.
 
 - 1.1mass noun The fur of the ocelot.
虎猫毛皮 Example sentencesExamples -  It is quite possible that TR, were he alive today, would be the proud owner of a gargantuan SUV with a custom interior made out of ocelot hide.
 
  
 
 OriginLate 18th century: from French, from Nahuatl tlatlocelotl, literally 'field tiger'.    Definition of ocelot in US English: ocelotnoun 1A medium-sized wild cat that has a tawny yellow coat marked with black blotches and spots, and ranges from southern Texas through South America. 虎猫 Felis pardalis, family Felidae Example sentencesExamples -  Near a remote salina, a brackish water hole, the tracks of ocelots and lesser anteaters dimpled the shoreline.
 -  She walked over to Seria, a large ocelot, who began purring as she came near.
 -  We were studying ocelots at the time and needed chickens to lure the cats into our traps.
 -  His property is ideal because it's next to the wildlife refuge that's home to the 100 ocelots remaining in the region.
 -  Durst, who once nourished his profile by toting an ocelot, would sell his clubs as soon as they got popular.
 -  They say it's like the link between the small ocelot and the large cats like the lion and tiger.
 -  He doesn't have big teeth so he wouldn't be able to protect himself against eagles, jaguars, and ocelots in central South America.
 -  In fact, he had a lion, an ocelot, and a boa constrictor during his playing days.
 -  As Erian had said, just as the ocelot ran off into the forest the poachers came at him, four of them.
 -  This is an ocelot from Central and South America.
 -  Roadkill has knocked an endangered cat, the ocelot, down to about 80 individuals in the U.S.
 -  After about ten minutes, the little ocelot returns with two plates full of steaming meat and vegetables.
 -  And the black girl had been watching her with the unblinking intensity of an ocelot ever since taking her position.
 -  For a small donation, people receive an information packet and can ‘adopt’ one of the radio-collared ocelots.
 -  I had an amazing few weeks in the rainforest with him, being shown the forest through an ocelot's eyes.
 -  An ocelot has eyes on its skin, but that is purely coincidental; the word comes from the Nahuatl word ocelotl, a jaguar.
 -  Clearly, bobcats could survive hunting pressures better than margays and ocelots.
 -  We estimate that fewer than 100 ocelots remain in the U.S., all in south Texas.
 -  This spring, enjoy the sound of success - the low purr of a rare ocelot kitten.
 -  He paces the bow, cramped as it is, like the caged ocelot or the little peccary leashed to a cleat.
 
 - 1.1 The fur of the ocelot.
虎猫毛皮 Example sentencesExamples -  It is quite possible that TR, were he alive today, would be the proud owner of a gargantuan SUV with a custom interior made out of ocelot hide.
 
  
 
 OriginLate 18th century: from French, from Nahuatl tlatlocelotl, literally ‘field tiger’.     |