What is a cat lover called

Authors who loved cats — Mark Twain

What do you call a person who loves cats? Cat lovers will know that you call them an ailurophile which is a word made up of the Greek words ‘ailouros’ (αἴλουρος) meaning cat and the suffix ‘phile’ meaning lover. Some online jokers might call them ‘crazy cat ladies’. They’d be wrong because ladies who love cats are not crazy unless they are hoarders when they are a tiny bit crazy.

//pictures-of-cats.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/ZOOM0003.mp3

‘Ailurophile’ has been around since the early 1900s and cat lovers have been in existence as long as the wildcat has been domesticated; almost 10,000 years (Cyprus). After all loving cats is one reason why cat domestication exists, the other being utility. According to the Merriam-Webster dictionary the first known use of the word ‘ailurophile’ was in 1914.

The wordhippo website says that αίλουρος (aílouros) means ‘wildcat’. Similar words are: γάτος meaning tomcat and αγριόγατος (agriógatos) meaning bobcat and catamount (puma).

Many famous people especially authors are classified as ailurophiles. I have a long list of ailurophile authors but perhaps the two best known American ailurophiles are Ernest Hemingway and Mark Twain. Mark Twain appears to have been besotted by cats. He liked to ‘rent’ them for a summer season. Perhaps his lifestyle prevented him ‘owing’ these cats. Perhaps he did not believe in cat ownership. If so he was correct.

In the UK three famous authors who were ailurophiles are Emily Brontë, Charlotte Brontë and Rudyard Kipling. Emily Brontë’s cat ‘Tiger’ played at her feet while she wrote Wuthering Heights.

Kipling is the author who imbued us with the idea that domestic cats are aloof and independent, “the Cat that Walks by Himself”. He was not quite right to be honest. Domestic cats have been quite sociable due to domestication.

A wonderful young lady who was an ailurophile is Anne Frank (1929-1945), the diarist. She was the guardian of three cats while hiding in an attic in The Netherlands during the war: Boche, Tommy and Mouschi.

All the authors who loved cats are loved themselves. To a man or woman they were very talented. It is interesting to note that the list of author ailurophiles that I have (Cat World by Dr Desmond Morris) contains 49 names. Ten of them are female and the remainder are males. Does that say more about who wants to be an author rather than who loves cats?

feline +‎ -o- +‎ -phile

NounEdit

felinophile (plural felinophiles)

  1. A person who likes cats. Synonym: ailurophile

An ailurophile is a cat lover, or someone who loves cats.

Ailurophilia (noun) A fondness or love for cats and other felines. From the ancient Greek word ‘ailouros’ meaning ‘cat’ and ‘philia’, which is ‘love’

Ailurophile – cat lover. How could anyone not love these two little kittens?

The phrase ‘ailurophile’ was first used in 1931. It comes from the Greek ‘phile,’ meaning ‘one who loves,’ and ‘ailouros’, the Greek word for ‘cat.’ The Greek cat word probably referred to wildcats, because the Greeks apparently didn’t have domesticated cats. Most scholars think the word for cat originated as a compound of the Greek ‘aiolos,’ meaning ‘quick-moving’. Combined with the Greek word for ‘tail’ which is ‘oura’, then ailouros seems to be the perfect definition of a cat – ‘quick moving tail.’

Cat-lovers were previously known as ‘philofelists’, which was a word coined around 1840. Source: Etymonline.com

If you are a cat-lover, click on the About Us button below and find out more about the Chats de Chatillon cat refuge and cattery. Or click on Donate now to make a secure online monetary donations – one-off or regular payments – and to find out other ways you can help us.

Related to ailurophile: cynosure

 (ī-lo͝or′ə-fīl′, ā-lo͝or′-)

[Greek ailouros, cat + -phile.]

ai·lu·ro·phil′i·a (-fĭl′ē-ə) n.

American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

(aɪˈlʊərəˌfaɪl) or

[C20: facetious coinage from Greek ailuros cat + -phile]

Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014

(aɪˈlʊər əˌfaɪl, eɪˈlʊər-)

n.

[1925–30; < Greek aílouro(s) cat + -phile]

ai•lu`ro•phil′ic (-ˈfɪl ɪk) adj.

Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

a lover of cats. Also called felinophile, philofelist, philogalist.

See also: Cats

-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.

Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited

Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.

Link to this page:

  • aelurophile
  • cat
  • CATS
  • collector
  • felinophile
  • philofelist
  • philogalist

The world would explode.""Then what business does he have trying to be my potential mate?"Naomi Mutua, an ailurophile if there ever was one confesses that she, too, often has to fend off questions from people who make assumptions about her just because she owns cats.

Some eccentric yet notable words include ailurophile, inglenook, and Susquehanna."

Additional novels in this ailurophile series include "Crime Cats: The Dusenbury Curse" (9780692318065, $8.99 pbk / $2.99 Kindle) and "Crime Cats: The Deadly Scarab" (9780692562277, $9.50 pbk).

Distilling a crash course about feline phonetics into plain terms accessible to readers of all backgrounds, The Secret Language of Cats is a "must" for cat owners and ailurophiles! 5 CDs, 5.5 hours.

With cat lovers, or ailurophiles, known to take a special interest in cat-related art in museums, a Twitter account dedicated to celebrating all things cats and collections, @CuratorialCats happens to be the home of hashtags such as #MuseumCats and #MewseumMonday.

We ailurophiles are bound together in a way that transcends our ages, our interests, our incomes and professions, our cultural backgrounds, our belief systems, and all our other differences.

An absolute "must-have" for true ailurophiles, and a dazzling treasure to simply page through.


Postingan terbaru

LIHAT SEMUA