You searched for: “cats
cat (s) (noun), cats (pl)
1. A small, furry, four-footed, carnivorous mammal ("Felis cats" or "Felis domestics") domesticated since early times as a catcher of rats and mice and as a pet and existing in several distinctive breeds and varieties: When James and Jamie lived on the farm, they always had barn cats that were adept at catching mice and rats.
2. Any of various other carnivorous mammals of the family "Felidae", which includes the lion, tiger, leopard, and lynx: With her binoculars, Mildred could see a large cat, perhaps a lynx, moving across the ridge of hills in the mountains.
3. As an informal application, a woman who is regarded as spiteful: There is always at least one cat among the women gossipers in the town.
4. In slang usagea a man; a player or devotee of jazz music: Hank was a cool cat who played a brass trombone in a band.
5. Etymology: The related words in the Romance languages; such as, Spanish and Portuguese gato, gata and Italian gatto, gatta, came from Medieval Latin gattus, gatta, variants of Late Latin cattus, catta. French chat, chatte came directly from Late Latin cattus, catta. Late Latin cattus and catta are possibly loan words from an African language: Nubian kadis, "cat".

Cats are believed to have been living in close association with humans for thousands of years

The cat, also called the "domestic cat" or "house cat", is a small carnivorous mammal of the subspecies "Felis silvestris catus". Its most immediate pre-domestication ancestor is believed to be the African wild cat, "Felis silvestris lybica".

Cats had a special place in the lives of ancient Egyptians

About 5,000 years ago cats were accepted members of the households of Egypt. Many of the breeds we now know have evolved from these ancient cats. The Egyptians used the cat to hunt fish and birds as well as to destroy the rats and mice that infested the grain stocks along the Nile.

The cat was considered so valuable that laws protected it, and eventually a cult of cat worship developed that lasted for more than 2,000 years. The cat goddess "Bastet"—whose name was also spelled "Bast", "Pasht", and many other ways—became one of the most sacred of all figures of worship. She was represented with the head of a cat. Soon all cats became sacred to the Egyptians, and all were well cared for.

After a cat's death, its body was mummified and buried in a special cemetery. One cemetery found in the 1800s in Egypt contained the preserved bodies of more than 300,000 cats.

The Egyptians had strict laws prohibiting the export of cats, however because cats were valued in other parts of the world for their rat-catching talents, they were taken by the Greeks and Romans to most parts of Europe. Domestic cats have also been found in India, China, and Japan where they were prized as pets as well as rodent catchers, and in China (and other parts of Asia), as meat for meals.

An example of an ancient worship of cats.
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Cats come in all sizes, breeds, colors, and fur styles

There are dozens of breeds of cats, some hairless or even tailless because of mutations, and they exist in a variety of different colors. Cats are skilled predators and have been known to hunt over one thousand different species for food. They are also intelligent animals, and some can be trained, or learn by themselves, to manipulate simple mechanisms, such as lever-handled doors.

Compiled from information located at
"The Cat in History".
This entry is located in the following unit: cat, cats (page 1)
cat, cats; kat, khat, qat
cat, cats (KAT, KATS) (noun)
1. A small animal that is related to lions and tigers and which is often kept by people as a pet: Carol's cat is curled up on the window sill enjoying the sunshine.

The lion is often called the "King of the Cats".

2. Now considered an old-fashioned word to refer to a man who considers himself to be fashionable: He was a cool cat who wore spats and a striped suit.
kat, khat, qat (KAT, KAHT) (noun)
The leaves of an evergreen shrub, Catha edulis of Arabia and Africa, the leaves of which are used as a narcotic or a euphoric stimulant when chewed or made into a beverage; such as, a tea: In some countries, kat is chewed and enjoyed on a daily basis.

The old cat thought he was so cool when he got some khat to chew, but when he got home he was so sleepy he forgot to feed his hungry cat.

cats
1. A clowder of cats. ("clouder" is the same word as "clutter", according to Lipton.)
2. A clutter of cats.
3. A kindle of young cats.
4. A cluster of house cats.
This entry is located in the following unit: Venereal Terms: Names of Groups (page 4)
More possibly related word entries
Units related to: “cats
(Greek: katta to Late Latin: cattus)
(Latin: cat, cats)
(Latin: helmet, helmet shaped, to cover with a helmet; cap; used primarily in zoology and botany with phases of sense development that seem to have been: weasel, weasel's skin or hide, leather, and then a helmet made of leather; by extension, it also means "cat, cats" in some words)
(Latin [cattus] > Spanish: cat, cats)
Word Entries containing the term: “cats
cat's face (s) (noun)
Hand as an art canvas

An artistic painting on the hand by Italian artist Guido Daniele.

This entry is located in the following units: facio-, faci-, face- (page 1) Hands as Objects of Art (page 1)
cat's-eye (s) (noun), cat's-eyes (pl)
A jewel which has a stripe that is not bright going down the middle that makes it appear like the eye of a cat: Jason bought his wife some cat's-eyes to add to her precious rings and necklaces, for which she was very happy.
This entry is located in the following unit: cat, cats (page 1)
fighting like cats and dogs; fight like cats and dogs
To argue a lot or in a very forceful and angry way: Shareen's sister and husband seemed to be always fighting like cats and dogs.
This entry is located in the following unit: cat, cats (page 1)
rain cats and dogs (verb), rains cats and dogs; rained cats and dogs; raining cats and dogs
To rain very hard or heavily: When Jill looked out of the window during the storm, she said, "We can't go shopping now because it's raining cats and dogs!"
A deluge of rain.
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This entry is located in the following unit: cat, cats (page 1)
Word Entries at Get Words: “cats
cat, cats
Greek: katta to Late Latin: cattus; in this unit.