In the street the painter began at once in his rapid French:
2
The poet only addresses the imagination; the painter addresses the senses directly.
3
The Occidental painter renders minute detail; he satisfies the imagination he evokes.
4
In these representations the painter and the glass-stainer vied with the sculptor.
5
But the painter represents the personages and the background in two dimensions.
1
He is afraid; he crouches like the panther in the trap, trembling.
2
Isolation and journey's end at Segesvar's home from home, the panther farm.
3
If that panther's really around, come the nightfall we might hear him.
4
The fur trader protects himself thus from the bear and the panther.
5
He is as dangerous as the crouching panther in its fearful leap.
1
She recognised in the puma-asin others of his race- adeadlyenemy.
2
Three big hutches, however, went up to the house with the puma.
3
The puma is in build like the lion, but has no mane.
4
For the discerning puma consumer Things are clearly not what they were.
5
There against the weird solitary sky the man and the puma fought.
1
The catamount was disturbed by the shrill echoes of a human voice.
2
The catamount had shifted his position, and the boys saw him plainly.
3
He was frightened to see the catamount within six feet of him.
4
None of the other men see you as their catamount, my prince.
5
But there was one source of profound satisfaction,-thecatamount had been killed.
1
The animal before them was what is now called the South Americanlion, or puma.
2
The Puma, or South AmericanLion, is not uncommon.
3
The Americanlions were definitely sexually dimorphic.
4
"No, no; it is a puma-theSouth Americanlion," I sang out.
5
In South America the corresponding animal is the jaguar, and in North America the cougar or catamount, and sometimes the Americanlion.
1
The mountainlion is a good animal and watches over the people.
2
Mariann was stalked by a large mountainlion a few years back.
3
At the second door a mountainlion or panther was the guardian.
4
The cougar or mountainlion behaved exactly as the others had done.
5
And the man yow-yowls, and makes noises like a wild mountainlion.
1
And he pointed to the paintedcat upon the lid of the packing-case.
2
He put the enamel figure into his pocket and taking up the broken board which bore the paintedcat:
1
There is a great redlion whom I love for his pleasant ways.
2
Next, Peter took down his gift-theshield with the great redlion on it, and the royal sword.
3
He died at his home in RedLion Square, London, in 1776.
4
High pressure indeed had passed away from the RedLion for ever.
5
Mr. Dempster did not stay long at the RedLion that evening.
1
I gazed down at her, and I could almost see the redtiger over me like a hood.
2
We counted forty-two different specimens; those yellow orchids you are so proud of at home, also redtiger-lilies, phloxes, and endless other varieties.
3
"The redtiger mongrel that you made your lover," he said.
1
He describes the case of the formerly endangered and badly inbred Floridapanther.
2
The same technique helped revitalize an inbred population of Floridapanthers.
3
In contrast, earlier studies have shown that genetic introgression positively affected Floridapanther survival.
4
I thought it might be a bear or one of those Floridapanthers I've read about.
5
The federal wildlife service considers the Floridapanther the most endangered mammal in the eastern United States.
1
Lillehorne inspected the silverlion's-head that topped his cane.
2
Lillehorne tapped the palm of his gloved left hand with the silverlion's-head that adorned his black-lacquered cane.
3
He was followed by Janki Meijer, who, supporting himself on his walking stick with the silverlion's-head handle, slowly and solemnly limped to the lectern.
4
That mission was to discover the SilverLion, a no very difficult task.
5
Tell me, Mr. Hay, do you know the Café of the SilverLion?
1
This habit has won for him another name-thatof SneakCat.
1
The last named feared him as they did the Indiandevil.
2
One of these was Lox, the Wolverine, or IndianDevil.
3
Now while they were sound asleep, Lox, the Wolverine, or IndianDevil, came prowling round.
4
Including the Mysterious and Wonderful Works of Lox, the Great IndianDevil, who rose from the Dead
5
Jumbo, the demon of Africa, has them under his command, and they equally obey the Yabahou, or Demerara Indiandevil.
1
"I always loved 'em," said he; "horses, dogs, Mexicanlions, cows, alligators-
2
On the head of one was a helmet of wood, fashioned to represent the head of the puma, or Mexicanlion.
3
Then a hundred pounds of Mexicanlion plumped down upon his head and flattened him, with a heavy jar, to the ground.
4
Ten yards away, to her right, half concealed by a clump of sacuista, Givens saw the crouching form of the Mexicanlion.
1
Was it a ghostcat?
2
As we say, if a ghost rat is stealing from your house, you also buy a ghostcat, not an ordinary cat.
3
"There's supposed to be a ghostcat here."
1
"It's a bad bite," he said, "the bite of a cat-felisconcolor.
1
The battered skull of a cougar ( Pumaconcolor), photographed at the Utah Museum of Natural History.
Ús de cougar en anglès
1
The animal making the easiest prey for the cougar is the elk.
2
The colt had turned just in time, and the cougar fell short.
3
In the United States, the cougar is hunted by dog and gun.
4
I sure hoped it wasn't a bear-or, more likely, a cougar.
5
The lunch party and the cougar were then photographed on the lawn.
6
That, these days, she'd be called a cougar rather than a crone.
7
The cougar or mountain lion behaved exactly as the others had done.
8
OK, before you think I went all cougar on him, never fear!
9
This time the cougar was well out on a low spreading branch.
10
Wait till, by good luck, we get a cougar in a tree.
11
Tige and the pup went down with me an' treed a cougar.
12
Except for its size, it could have been a splayed-out cougar print.
13
She would fight for her as a cougar would for its young.
14
He has left a trail as plain as a cougar's in winter.
15
A cougar snapped at him and he smacked it on the snout.
16
Had the cougar got away, or was he still within the thicket?