72
The other beasts familiar to the people were aṇil,[1] the squirrel, karaḍi,[2] the bear, kāṭṭā,[3] the wild cow, kīri,[4] the mongoose, kuraṅgu,[5] the monkey, nari,[6] the jakal, śennāi,[7] the wild dog, the nāy,[8] or the kōnāy,[9] the wolf, nīrnāy,[10] the beaver, nāvippiḷḷai,[11] the civet cat, muṭpaṇṛi,[12] the porcupine, maraimān,[13] the yak, muśu,[14] the ape, muyal,[15] the hare, yānai,[16] the elephant.
The chief house-pests were eli[17] the rat, kāreli,[18] the black rat, peruchchāḷi,[19] the bandicoot, mūnjūṛu,[20] the mouse and the ubiquitous mosquito, kośu,[21] which was such a great nuisance as to receive a dozen other names, aśaval,[22] añalam,[23] ulaṅgu,[24] śagal,[25] tummu,[26] tuḷịal,[27] nilambi,[28] nulumbu,[29] noḷḷal,[30] muñal,[31] valu,[32] añal;[33] ī,[34] the house-fly and andu,[35] insect found in stored grain. But the bed bug seems to be an import from abroad, for, it has but a kāraṇappeyar, i.e. mūttaippūcchi,[36] the bundle-insect.
Birds
There are many general names for birds paṛavai,[37] kuḍiñai,[38] kurugu,[39] puḷ;[40] their young ones, kuñju,[41] pārppu;[42] the cry of birds payir;[43] their nest, kaṭchi,[44] kuñjuṛai,[45] kuḍambai,[46] kurambai,[47] kūṇḍu.[48] A flock of birds was called thoḻudi,[49] the cries of a flock, tuḻani;[50] the beating of a birds' wings, ośanaittal,[51] puḍaittal;[52] female birds are called peḍai,[53] peṭṭai,[54] pēḍai;[55] the females of birds other than the gallinaceous fowl and the owl, āḷagu;[56] their males except in the case of the peafowl and the eḻāl,[57] śēval;[58] the cock of the peafowl and the eḻāl, pōttu.[59] The food of birds and of some animals irai,[60] uṇḍi,[61] uṛai,[62] ūṭṭi.[63]
The following are names of some species of birds:—anril,[64] nightingale, annam,[65] swan āndai,[66] large eyed owl, uḷḷān,[67] snipe, ūrkkuruvi,[68] sparrow, tūkkaṇāṅguruvi,[69] kavudāri,[70] partridge, kavudam,[71] king-fisher, kaḻugu,[72] eagle, kākkai,[73] crow, nīrkkākkai,[74] a diving water-bird, kāḍai,[75] quail, kiḷi,[76] parrot, kuyil,[77] cuckoo, kurugu,[78] village fowl, also kōḻi,[79] another variety, kūgai,[80] large hooting owl, kokku,[81] stork, śadagam,[82] sky-lark, śichchili,[83] kingfisher, sival,[84] pagaṇḍai[85], another species of partridge, sembōttu,[86] nārai,[87] heron, parundu,[88] kite, purā,[89] pigeon, mayil,[90] peafowl.
The love of nature and close observation of natural objects which was a great characteristic of the Tamils of ancient times are constantly revealed in early Tamil poems. On later Tamil Poetry the conventions of the later artificial Sanskrit Poetry wielded
- ↑ அணில்.
- ↑ கரடி.
- ↑ காட்டா.
- ↑ கீரி.
- ↑ குரங்கு.
- ↑ நரி.
- ↑ செந்நாய்.
- ↑ ஓநாய்.
- ↑ கோநாய்.
- ↑ நீர்நாய்.
- ↑ நாவிப்பிள்ளை.
- ↑ முட்பன்றி.
- ↑ மரைமான்.
- ↑ முசு.
- ↑ முயல்.
- ↑ யானை.
- ↑ எலி.
- ↑ காரெலி.
- ↑ பெருச்சாளி.
- ↑ மூஞ்சுறு.
- ↑ கொசு.
- ↑ அசவல்.
- ↑ அஞலம்.
- ↑ உலங்கு.
- ↑ சகல்.
- ↑ தும்மு.
- ↑ துள்ளல்
- ↑ நிலம்பி
- ↑ நுலும்பு
- ↑ நொன்னல்
- ↑ முஞல்
- ↑ வலு
- ↑ அஞல்
- ↑ ஈ
- ↑ அந்து
- ↑ (Tamil characters)
- ↑ 37
- ↑ 38
- ↑ 39
- ↑ 40
- ↑ 41
- ↑ 42
- ↑ 43
- ↑ 44
- ↑ 45
- ↑ 48
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- ↑ 48
- ↑ 49
- ↑ 50
- ↑ 51
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- ↑ 70
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- ↑ 72
- ↑ 73
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- ↑ 89
- ↑ 90