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Definition of Mourning cloak
1. Noun. Of temperate regions; having dark purple wings with yellow borders.
Generic synonyms: Brush-footed Butterfly, Four-footed Butterfly, Nymphalid, Nymphalid Butterfly
Group relationships: Genus Nymphalis, Nymphalis
Definition of Mourning cloak
1. Noun. (obsolete) A dark cloak worn by a mourner at a funeral. ¹
2. Noun. (American English) A large butterfly, ''Nymphalis antiopa'', native to Eurasia and North America. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Lexicographical Neighbors of Mourning Cloak
Literary usage of Mourning cloak
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Nature Biographies: The Lives of Some Every-day Butterflies; Moths by Clarence Moores Weed (1903)
"This insect is called the Antiopa or Mourning- cloak Butterfly; it is represented
natural size in Figure. It has passed the winter in this adult condition, ..."
2. Stories of Insect Life by Clarence Moores Weed (1903)
"THE mourning cloak OR ANTIOPA BUTTERFLY. BUTTERFLIES in winter are rare objects,
but by a little searching in the light situations you may often find ..."
3. Photography for the Sportsman Naturalist by Leverett White Brownell (1904)
"Mourning-cloak Butterfly. Of course, to do the best work possible in this branch,
one should be something of an entomologist ; but this knowledge will come, ..."
4. Every-day Butterflies, a Group of Biographies by Samuel Hubbard Scudder (1899)
"... ANTIOPA —THE MOURNING- CLOAK WANDERING in open groves, while the trees are
still bare of leaf, say in March, or even in warm and sunny days in February, ..."
5. Nature Study in Elementary Schools: A Manual for Teachers by Lucy Langdon Williams Wilson (1897)
"... the mourning cloak, and the Milkweed or Monarch, as it is often called, are
larger, more beautiful, and more interesting, if they can be ob- Mourning ..."
6. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register (1892)
"To Leonard Greene twenty shilling aud a mourning cloak. To my man Thomas Pullin
forty shillings and a mourning cloak and my suit of serge which I late made. ..."