English

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Etymology

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Etymology is uncertain.[1] In 2007 it was speculated that the derivation was a mishearing of "heraldic".[2]

Adjective

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horaltic (comparative more horaltic, superlative most horaltic)

  1. (rare) Used to describe birds, particularly vultures, in a characteristic pose with wings spread and raised.
    • 2008, Marta Magellan, Those Voracious Vultures, page 47:
      Vultures are often seen standing in what is called a horaltic pose.
    • 2012, Lawrence Winkler, Westwood Lake Chronicles:
      At dawn you can find them all with their wings spread out in the 'horaltic pose' (after the Egyptian god of the morning sun, Horus).

References

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  1. ^ “"Horaltic"”, in sci.lang[1], 2007 November 4, retrieved January 2, 2020
  2. ^ “"A Wake of Vultures"”, in The Greenbelt[2], 2007 January 2, retrieved January 2, 2020

Anagrams

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  NODES
Note 1