English–Esperanto dictionary

Esperanto translation of the English word deer

English → Esperanto
  
EnglishEsperanto
🔗 Ecologist Roeland Vermeulen says settled wolves are more likely to eat deer or wild boar.
(of a deer)
axis deer
(chital; chital deer; spotted deer)
Bactrian deer
(Bactrian wapiti; Bokhara deer; Bukhara deer)
Bawean hog deer
(Bawean deer; Kuhl’s hog deer)
baveana cervo
black musk‐deer
(dusky musk‐deer)
nigra moskulo
nigravosta cervo
🔗 For the last two or three decades, the black‐tailed deer have been known to roam into yards and stroll the downtown area of Ashland, which lies in the heavily forested foothills of the Siskiyou and Cascade Mountains.
Bokhara deer
(Bactrian deer; Bactrian wapiti; Bukhara deer)
brow‐antler deer
(Eld’s deer)
Bukhara deer
(Bactrian deer; Bactrian wapiti; Bokhara deer)
Calamian deer
(Calamian hog deer)
kalamia cervo
Calamian hog deer
(Calamian deer)
kalamia cervo
Central Asian red deer
Chinese forest musk‐deer
(dwarf musk‐deer)
ĉina moskulo
chital deer
(axis deer; chital; spotted deer)
deer fly
(deer ked)
deer ked
(deer fly)
dusky musk‐deer
(black musk‐deer)
nigra moskulo
dwarf musk‐deer
(Chinese forest musk‐deer)
ĉina moskulo
eastern roe‐deer
(eastern roe; Siberian roe; Siberian roe‐deer)
siberia kapreolo
Eld’s deer
(brow‐antler deer)
European roe‐deer
(European roe; western roe; western roe‐deer)
eŭropa kapreolo
Himalayan musk‐deer
himalaja moskulo
hog deer
porka cervo
Irish giant deer
(Irish elk)
giganta cervo
Kuhl’s hog deer
(Bawean deer; Bawean hog deer)
baveana cervo
leaf deer
(leaf muntjac)
folia muntiako
(
hemiona cervo
)
🔗 Now, other species such as mule deer are protected by certain hunting regulations and roam unbothered.
North Andean deer
norda gvemulo
pampas deer
pampa cervo
Père David’s deer
Peruvian red deer
(red brocket)
amerika mazamo
Philippine brown deer
(Philippine deer; Philippine sambar)
Philippine deer
(Philippine brown deer; Philippine sambar)
Philippine spotted deer
ruĝa cervo
🔗 Intriguingly, in other parts of Europe where red deer are also available, wolves appear to prefer this prey to wild boar, suggesting that they discriminate between different types of venison.
Cervorivero
🔗 Then in 1926 a new specimen was discovered near Steveville on the Red Deer River, Alberta, Canada.
rusa deer
(rusa; Sunda sambar; Timor deer)
timora cervo
Schomburgk’s deer
taja cervo
Siberian musk‐deer
moska moskulo
Siberian roe‐deer
(eastern roe; eastern roe‐deer; Siberian roe)
siberia kapreolo
sika deer
()
South Andean deer
suda gvemulo
spotted deer
(axis deer; chital; chital deer)
Thorold’s deer
(white‐lipped deer)
blanklipa cervo
Timor deer
(rusa; rusa deer; Sunda sambar)
timora cervo
Virginia deer
(whitetail; white‐tailed deer)
blankvosta cervo
water deer
western roe‐deer
(European roe; European roe‐deer; western roe)
eŭropa kapreolo
white‐lipped deer
(Thorold’s deer)
blanklipa cervo
(Virginia deer; whitetail)
blankvosta cervo
🔗 This shrub is an important food source for a number of animals, including bighorn sheep, white‐tailed deer and grizzly bears.
deerberry
(American wintergreen; boxberry; checkerberry; eastern teaberry)
deer‐park
fallow‐deer
()
mouse‐deer
musk‐deer
()
(roe)
🔗 Scientists from Durham University, UK, in collaboration with the University of Sassari in Italy, found that the diet of wolves was consistently dominated by the consumption of wild boar, which accounted for about two thirds of total prey biomass, with roe‐deer accounting for around a third.