He was a tiger on the basketball court.
even the best defense can't keep that tiger from scoring
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Research on the Australian thylacine (Tasmanian tiger), driven to extinction less than a century ago, is ahead of schedule.—Mike Snider, USA Today, 16 Apr. 2025 After all, what could the pattern of a tiger’s skin have to do with abstract mathematics?—Manon Bischoff, Scientific American, 16 Apr. 2025 Along the way, various other species also breathed their last: woolly mammoths, Irish elk, dodos, carrier pigeons, Steller’s sea cows, great auks, thylacines (Tasmanian tigers).—D. T. Max, New Yorker, 7 Apr. 2025 The sheriff’s office reportedly expressed concern over how the animals were being cared for, but Mitchell said his tigers are given water and fed regularly.—Brian Niemietz, New York Daily News, 7 Apr. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tiger
Word History
Etymology
Middle English tigre, from Old English tiger & Anglo-French tigre, both from Latin tigris, from Greek, probably of Iranian origin; akin to Avestan tighra- pointed; akin to Greek stizein to tattoo — more at stick
First Known Use
before the 12th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a
Time Traveler
The first known use of tiger was
before the 12th century
: a large Asian flesh-eating mammal of the same family as the domestic cat with a coat that is typically light brown to orange with mostly vertical black stripes
2
: any of several large wildcats (as the jaguar or cougar)
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