épagneul - meaning and definition. What is épagneul
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What (who) is épagneul - definition

DOG TYPE
Spaniels; Flushing Spaniels; Flushing spaniels; Flushing spaniel; Epagneul; Épagneul
  • A drawing of a typical skull of a spaniel
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  • A [[Welsh Springer Spaniel]] on the beach
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  • A 16th-century drawing of a hawking party with spaniels
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  • Brittany Spaniel
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  • [[English Cocker Spaniel]]s are small spaniels
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  • [[King Charles Spaniel]]s, photographed in 1915, one of the smaller breeds, are primarily [[lap dog]]s
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spaniel         
(spaniels)
A spaniel is a type of dog with long ears that hang down.
N-COUNT
spaniel         
¦ noun a dog of a breed with a long silky coat and drooping ears.
Origin
ME: from OFr. espaigneul 'Spanish (dog)', from L. Hispaniolus 'Spanish'.
Spaniel         
·adj Cringing; fawning.
II. Spaniel ·noun A cringing, fawning person.
III. Spaniel ·vt To follow like a spaniel.
IV. Spaniel ·vi To Fawn; to Cringe; to be obsequious.
V. Spaniel ·noun One of a breed of small dogs having long and thick hair and large drooping ears. The legs are usually strongly feathered, and the tail bushy. ·see ·Illust. under Clumber, and Cocker.

Wikipedia

Spaniel

A spaniel is a type of gun dog. Spaniels were especially bred to flush game out of denser brush. By the late 17th century, spaniels had been specialized into water and land breeds. The extinct English Water Spaniel was used to retrieve water fowl shot down with arrows. Land spaniels were setting spaniels—those that crept forward and pointed their game, allowing hunters to ensnare them with nets, and springing spaniels—those that sprang pheasants and partridges for hunting with falcons, rabbits and smaller mammals such as rats and mice for hunting with greyhounds. During the 17th century, the role of the spaniel dramatically changed as Englishmen began hunting with flintlocks for wing shooting. Charles Goodall and Julia Gasow (1984) write that spaniels were "transformed from untrained, wild beaters, to smooth, polished gun dogs."

The word "spaniel" would seem to be derived from the medieval French espaigneul—"Spanish"—to modern French, espagnol.