¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sapajous
1. sapajou [n] - See also: sapajou
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sapajous
Literary usage of Sapajous
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Horse Stories and Stories of Other Animals: Experience of Two Boys in by Thomas Wallace Knox (1890)
"... American Howler—sapajous and Spider Monkeys—Simian Intelligence—Organizing to
Rob Gardens—A Bridge of Monkeys. " WHAT animal shall we consider now ? ..."
2. A History of the Earth and Animated Nature by Oliver Goldsmith (1856)
"The first of the sapajous is the ... distinguished from the rest of the sapajous
by its yellow flesh- coloured face. The fourth is the SAI. ..."
3. A History of the Earth and Animated Nature by Oliver Goldsmith (1875)
"Those with muscular holding tails, are called sapajous ; those with feeble, ...
The first of the sapajous is the Warine, or the Brazilian Guariba. ..."
4. The English Cyclopaedia by Charles Knight (1867)
"Small in size and playful in disposition, the sapajous lead a gregarious merry
life, feeding chiefly on fruits and insects. The facial angle is about 60°. ..."
5. Horse Stories and Stories of Other Animals: Experience of Two Boys in by Thomas Wallace Knox (1890)
"... American Howler—sapajous and Spider Monkeys—Simian Intelligence—Organizing to
Rob Gardens—A Bridge of Monkeys. " WHAT animal shall we consider now ? ..."
6. A History of the Earth and Animated Nature by Oliver Goldsmith (1856)
"The first of the sapajous is the ... distinguished from the rest of the sapajous
by its yellow flesh- coloured face. The fourth is the SAI. ..."
7. A History of the Earth and Animated Nature by Oliver Goldsmith (1875)
"Those with muscular holding tails, are called sapajous ; those with feeble, ...
The first of the sapajous is the Warine, or the Brazilian Guariba. ..."
8. The English Cyclopaedia by Charles Knight (1867)
"Small in size and playful in disposition, the sapajous lead a gregarious merry
life, feeding chiefly on fruits and insects. The facial angle is about 60°. ..."