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cachalot
[ kash-uh-lot, -loh ]
cachalot
/ ˈkæʃəˌlɒt /
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Word History and Origins
Origin of cachalot1
1740–50; < French ≪ Portuguese cacholote, equivalent to cachol ( a ) pate, noggin (of obscure origin) + -ote augmentative suffix
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Word History and Origins
Origin of cachalot1
C18: from French, from Portuguese, cachalote, of unknown origin
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Example Sentences
M. Pomel, whom I cited above, believed it to come from the brain of the whale called "cachalot."
From Project Gutenberg
But it may, perhaps, be significant that a cachalot was stranded off Sark on June 3.
From Project Gutenberg
Out came the head belonging to it, and a spout like an explosion burst forth, denoting the presence of an enormous bull-cachalot.
From Project Gutenberg
Except for the head work, removing the blubber was effected in precisely the same way as in the case of the cachalot.
From Project Gutenberg
The resultant oil, when recent, is of a clear white, unlike the golden-tinted fluid obtained from the cachalot.
From Project Gutenberg
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