lion$44838$ - traduzione in greco
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In questa pagina puoi ottenere un'analisi dettagliata di una parola o frase, prodotta utilizzando la migliore tecnologia di intelligenza artificiale fino ad oggi:

  • come viene usata la parola
  • frequenza di utilizzo
  • è usato più spesso nel discorso orale o scritto
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  • esempi di utilizzo (varie frasi con traduzione)
  • etimologia

lion$44838$ - traduzione in greco

SUBSPECIES OF MAMMAL
Atlas Lion; North African Lion; Barbary Lion; North African lion; Numidian lion; Atlas lion; Egyptian lion; Algerian lion; Berber lion; Northern African lion; Mauretanian lion
  • The last photograph of a wild lion in the Atlas Mountains, taken by [[Marcelin Flandrin]] on a flight from [[Casablanca]] to [[Dakar]] in 1925<ref name="Black et al.2013"/>
  • Painting of a lion hunt in Morocco by [[Eugène Delacroix]], 1855, in the [[Hermitage Museum]]
  • Map shows range of ''P. l. leo'' and ''P. l. melanochaita''<ref name=Bertola2016/>
  • A Barbary lion in the [[Bronx Zoo]], 1897

lion      
n. λιοντάρι

Definizione

Lioncel
·noun A small lion, especially one of several borne in the same coat of arms.

Wikipedia

Barbary lion

The Barbary lion, also called the North African lion, Berber lion, Atlas lion, and Egyptian lion, is an extinct population of the lion subspecies Panthera leo leo. It lived in the mountains and deserts of the Barbary Coast of North Africa from Morocco to Egypt. It was eradicated following the spread of firearms and bounties for shooting lions. A comprehensive review of hunting and sighting records revealed that small groups of lions may have survived in Algeria until the early 1960s, and in Morocco until the mid-1960s. Today, it is locally extinct in this region. Fossils of the Barbary lion dating to between 100,000 and 110,000 years were found in the cave of Bizmoune, near Essaouira.

Until 2017, the Barbary lion was considered a distinct lion subspecies. Results of morphological and genetic analyses of lion samples from North Africa showed that Barbary lions do not differ significantly from the Asiatic lion and fall into the same subclade. This North African/Asian subclade is closely related to lions from West Africa and northern parts of Central Africa and therefore grouped into the Northern lion subspecies Panthera leo leo.