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mongoose-like creature, weasel [RY]
mongoose-like creature, weasel [RY]


yellow weasel, mustela lataica pallas, squirrel [JV]  
yellow weasel, mustela lataica pallas, squirrel [JV] <br>


(med) Weasel, Mustela altaica (Phrin Las 1987). Synonym  : sbre (Phrin Las 1987). sre mong sha dang sma ra, Weasel flesh and long hairs around the mouth (Phrin Las 1987). <br>
 
Mustela altaica is found in mountains of Asia, from Russian Central Asia to Korea to northern India, at elevations up to 3,500 m or more (animaldiversity.org). [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 17:22, 30 November 2021 (UTC)  
('''[[sman]]''') Siberian Weasel (''Mustela sibirica'') (dGa' ba'i rDo rje 1995). <br>
 
'''sre mong''' ni/ rigs gnyis yod/ ti lo 'dra yang chung phra mtho gang tsam ser po byi ba lta bu'o// ne'u le ni 'brug pa las 'ong ba khra ba'o/ shel sgong las/ sre mong sha yis sha las sbyar dug dang// lhog 'dul srin bya'i sha yis gdon la phan// zhes so // (mDzes mtshar mig rgyan, print p 248) <br>
 
Illustrations : 'Phrin Las 1987 (23_054) sre mong (33_054) sre mong sha dang sma ra. 'Jam-dpal (print p 248) sre mong. dGa' ba'i rDo rje (1995) ill. 789 <br>
 
The Siberian weasel is widely distributed from the Himalayas to Siberia. <br>
'Jam-dpal describes 2 kinds, a first one being similar but smaller than a polecat ('''[[te lo]]'''), and a second one named ne'u le, coming from Bhutan. Das (1902) gives ne'u le and dbyi mong under the heading sre mo/sre mong. Possibly related mustelids like a ferret-badger. Lepcha and Bhotia peoples in northeast India keep the Burmese ferret-badger in their homes to control insect and rodent pests and to use it as a source of food, fur, and medicines by the local people (animaldiversity.org). <br>
But '''[[ne le]]''' and ne'u le are also names for kites or hawks. <br>
[[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 16:05, 14 February 2024 (EST)


  [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:sa]]
  [[Category:Tibetan Dictionary]] [[Category:rydic2003]] [[Category:sa]]

Latest revision as of 16:19, 30 May 2025

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སྲེ་མོང
mongoose-like creature, weasel [RY]

yellow weasel, mustela lataica pallas, squirrel [JV]


(sman) Siberian Weasel (Mustela sibirica) (dGa' ba'i rDo rje 1995).

sre mong ni/ rigs gnyis yod/ ti lo 'dra yang chung phra mtho gang tsam ser po byi ba lta bu'o// ne'u le ni 'brug pa las 'ong ba khra ba'o/ shel sgong las/ sre mong sha yis sha las sbyar dug dang// lhog 'dul srin bya'i sha yis gdon la phan// zhes so // (mDzes mtshar mig rgyan, print p 248)

Illustrations : 'Phrin Las 1987 (23_054) sre mong (33_054) sre mong sha dang sma ra. 'Jam-dpal (print p 248) sre mong. dGa' ba'i rDo rje (1995) ill. 789

The Siberian weasel is widely distributed from the Himalayas to Siberia.
'Jam-dpal describes 2 kinds, a first one being similar but smaller than a polecat (te lo), and a second one named ne'u le, coming from Bhutan. Das (1902) gives ne'u le and dbyi mong under the heading sre mo/sre mong. Possibly related mustelids like a ferret-badger. Lepcha and Bhotia peoples in northeast India keep the Burmese ferret-badger in their homes to control insect and rodent pests and to use it as a source of food, fur, and medicines by the local people (animaldiversity.org).
But ne le and ne'u le are also names for kites or hawks.
Johannes Schmidt (talk) 16:05, 14 February 2024 (EST)