| 释义 | 
		Definition of hoolock in English: hoolock(also hoolock gibbon) noun ˈhuːləkˈho͞oläk A gibbon with white eyebrows, the male of which has black fur and the female golden, found from north-eastern India to Burma (Myanmar). Hylobates hoolock, family Hylobatidae  Example sentencesExamples -  Male hoolock gibbons are black, while the females are variable in color, ranging through black, grey, and brown, with a white band across the forehead.
 -  Adult hoolocks typically live in the crown region of the forest where they have no natural predators except man.
 -  Hoolock Gibbon (Bunopithecus hoolock hoolock) is the only species of ape to be found in India.
 -  The world of the hoolock gibbons in the Borajan reserve forest in Assam is dying, thanks to illegal tree-felling.
 -  The hoolock gibbon is a frugivorous species, but will also consume immature leaves, flowers, and invertebrates.
 -  The Fakim Sanctuary, close to the Myanmar border, is inhabited by tigers and hoolock gibbons.
 -  Gibbons comprise four distinct genera (siamangs, hoolocks, crested gibbons and dwarf gibbons), which are less closely related to each other than humans and chimpanzees.
 -  Information is so scanty regarding the hoolock gibbon (found in Yunnan, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Assam) and the white-cheeked gibbon (found in Yunnan, Laos and Vietnam) that their conservation status is not even defined.
 -  The principal chief conservator of forests had recently said hoolock gibbons were abundantly available in Assam and there was no need to raise a hue and cry to protect them.
 -  For a strictly arboreal species like the hoolock gibbon, a gap in the canopy is like a roadblock.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: perhaps from Bengali and imitative of its cry.    Definition of hoolock in US English: hoolock(also hoolock gibbon) nounˈho͞oläk A gibbon with white eyebrows, the male of which has black fur and the female golden, found from northeastern India to Burma (Myanmar). Hylobates hoolock, family Hylobatidae  Example sentencesExamples -  The world of the hoolock gibbons in the Borajan reserve forest in Assam is dying, thanks to illegal tree-felling.
 -  The Fakim Sanctuary, close to the Myanmar border, is inhabited by tigers and hoolock gibbons.
 -  The principal chief conservator of forests had recently said hoolock gibbons were abundantly available in Assam and there was no need to raise a hue and cry to protect them.
 -  Gibbons comprise four distinct genera (siamangs, hoolocks, crested gibbons and dwarf gibbons), which are less closely related to each other than humans and chimpanzees.
 -  For a strictly arboreal species like the hoolock gibbon, a gap in the canopy is like a roadblock.
 -  Information is so scanty regarding the hoolock gibbon (found in Yunnan, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Assam) and the white-cheeked gibbon (found in Yunnan, Laos and Vietnam) that their conservation status is not even defined.
 -  Hoolock Gibbon (Bunopithecus hoolock hoolock) is the only species of ape to be found in India.
 -  Adult hoolocks typically live in the crown region of the forest where they have no natural predators except man.
 -  The hoolock gibbon is a frugivorous species, but will also consume immature leaves, flowers, and invertebrates.
 -  Male hoolock gibbons are black, while the females are variable in color, ranging through black, grey, and brown, with a white band across the forehead.
 
 
 Origin   Early 19th century: perhaps from Bengali and imitative of its cry.     |