mastodon
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mastodon
a relative of the elephant that existed in MIOCENE and PLIOCENE times. It was, in fact, elephant-like and had a short trunk and long tusks.Collins Dictionary of Biology, 3rd ed. © W. G. Hale, V. A. Saunders, J. P. Margham 2005
References in periodicals archive
Another example can be found in the world of letters, in which scholars deny absolutely the validity of authorial intent or historical context properly understood, the objective being to exalt this ambitious theory or that, a practice that illuminates nothing beyond the
mastodonic self-esteem of the critic at the direct expense of the creative intelligence.
Ironically, in a postcard received by Agnes Bedford in April 1921, Pound had declared 'Circe' to be 'enormous - megaloscrumptious -
mastodonic': Pound would not renew his correspondence with Joyce until 1923.
THE CASE OF AUTOMOBILES Here is an industry that is, and has long been, dominated by a triopoly of firms of
mastodonic proportions.
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