Difference between revisions of "sre mong"

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(med) Mountain weasel (Mustela altaica) (Phrin Las 1987). <br>
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(med) Weasel (''Mustela'' sp.) (Das 1902). <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, pdf p 274) <br>
 
  
Illustrations : 'Phrin Las 1987 (23_054) sre mong (33_054) sre mong sha dang sma ra. Jam-dpal (pdf p 274) sre mong <br>
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'''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>
  
Commonly identified with the weasel, Mustela altaica, which 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). Jam-dpal describes 2 kinds, a first one being similar but smaller than a polecat, and a second one named ne'u le, coming from Bhutan. Das gives ne'u le and dbyi mong under the heading sre mo/sre mong. Ne'u le may be a related mustelid 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 is used as a source of food, fur, and medicines by the local people (animaldiversity.org) [[User:Johannes Schmidt|Johannes Schmidt]] ([[User talk:Johannes Schmidt|talk]]) 16:05, 14 February 2024 (EST)
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Illustrations : 'Phrin Las 1987 (23_054) sre mong (33_054) sre mong sha dang sma ra. 'Jam-dpal (print p 248) sre mong <br>
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Commonly identified with the weasel, ''Mustela altaica'', which is found in mountains of Asia, from Russian Central Asia and Korea to northern India, at elevations up to 3,500 m or more (animaldiversity.org). 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. Ne'u le may be a related mustelid 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 is used 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 hawks. <br>
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[[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 11:19, 5 May 2024

This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).

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

yellow weasel, mustela lataica pallas, squirrel [JV]


(med) Weasel (Mustela sp.) (Das 1902).

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

Commonly identified with the weasel, Mustela altaica, which is found in mountains of Asia, from Russian Central Asia and Korea to northern India, at elevations up to 3,500 m or more (animaldiversity.org). 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. Ne'u le may be a related mustelid 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 is used 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 hawks.
Johannes Schmidt (talk) 16:05, 14 February 2024 (EST)