Camelid — Temporal range: 45–0 Ma … Wikipedia
camelid — noun Etymology: New Latin Camelidae, from Camelus, genus name, from Latin Date: 1911 any of a family (Camelidae) of 2 toed ruminant artiodactyl mammals having a 3 chambered stomach and including the camels, llamas, and vicuña … New Collegiate Dictionary
camelid — noun Any of a family of mammals including the camel, llama, alpaca, guanaco and vicuña … Wiktionary
camelíd — s. n., pl. camelíde … Romanian orthography
camelid — n. member of the family that comprise camels and llamas … English contemporary dictionary
camelid — [kə mi:lɪd, kaməlɪd] noun Zoology a mammal of a family (Camelidae) comprising the camels together with the llama and its relatives … English new terms dictionary
camelid — /ˈkæməlɪd/ (say kamuhlid) noun any of various herbivorous ungulates of the family Camelidae, as the Bactrian camel, alpaca, llama, vicuña, and guanaco, with two toe bones set in a broad leathery foot pad, and an upper lip split in two with each… …
camelid — camˈelid noun An animal of the Camelˈidae, the family of artiodactyls which includes camels and llamas (also adjective) • • • Main Entry: ↑camel … Useful english dictionary
Alpaca — Taxobox name = Alpaca status = DOM image width = 250px image caption = An unshorn Alpaca grazing regnum = Animalia phylum = Chordata classis = Mammalia ordo = Artiodactyla familia = Camelidae genus = Vicugna species = V. pacos binomial = Vicugna… … Wikipedia
pre-Columbian civilizations — Introduction the aboriginal American Indian (Mesoamerican Indian) cultures that evolved in Meso America (part of Mexico and Central America) and the Andean region (western South America) prior to Spanish exploration and conquest in the 16th … Universalium