Translingual

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Etymology

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See Ardipithecus ramidus.

Adjective

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ramidus

  1. Only used in Ardipithecus ramidus

English

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Etymology

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From New Latin ramidus, from Afar ramid (root).

Noun

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ramidus (plural ramidi)

  1. (informal) Ellipsis of Ardipithecus ramidus. (an early hominid from the Pliocene)
    • 1995, Biology Digest - Volume 21, page 83:
      The first ramidus fossil found was an upper molar tooth, unearthed in 1992.
    • 2006, Henry Kong, A History of the Universe: Volume I: Complexity, page 117:
      Ramidi were in many ways a mix of humans and chimps. Their smallish brains were barely larger than those of a modern chimp. But they held their heads on the top of the vertebral column instead of in front of it; ie, they walked upright. It is likely that ramidus was the ancestor of all subsequent hominid species, including our own.
    • 2011, Paulos Milkias, Ethiopia[1], page xvii:
      It is the birthplace of human beings' ancestor Lucy, who lived 3.2 million years ago; an older ancestor, Ardi, who lived 4.4 million years ago; and the even older ramidus who lived 5.8 million years before humans' known written history.
    • 2013, Martin Malloy, Evolution in a Nutshell, page 137:
      Ramidus was either an early intermediate hominid or a dead end that faded out without diverging into more species.

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