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Animals by Alternate Etymology

Can you guess these animals based on a totally made up explanation of their name?
Quiz by Quizmaster
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Last updated: January 12, 2022
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First submittedJanuary 12, 2022
Times taken8,549
Average score55.0%
Rating3.31
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Name meaning
Animal
Because these insects are often found on sports fields in India
Cricket
Named for the city in New York state where they first evolved
Buffalo
Named after Volkswagen's all-time best selling car
Beetle
This bovid was so-named because of its tendency to blab and gossip
Yak
This spider was rebranded in 2021 to advertise a superhero movie
Black Widow
This big cat was named for a British car brand
Jaguar
Like many plumbing companies, this animal changed its name
so it would be first in the phone book
Aardvark
While in Siam, if you hear a "grrr" sound coming from the jungle, you better watch out!
Tiger
Because they love rotten pears
Parrot
Ancient people in northern Scandinavia thought they could cause precipitation
Reindeer
Named for the people who discovered it: Jack Palance and Al Gore
Jackal
Because early safari goers were disappointed that this lazy predator was
always just lying around
Lion
The first people to see them thought they were "merely cats"
Meerkat
Do ring the gong, if you ever see one of these
Dugong
Because this insect was often found swarming around churns
Butterfly
One person might not be able to spot this bird, but two can
Toucan
Rupert Murdoch bought the naming rights to this animal
Fox
Early Caribbean explorers thought it was just a man in a T-shirt
Manatee
An acronym that means Extremely Elusive Lamprey
Eel
Because they are such good swimmers they are like the U.S. navy's special forces
Seal
+3
Level 83
Jan 15, 2022
Fantastic quiz - thanks!
+9
Level 83
Jan 15, 2022
The butterfly one is surprisingly close to the truth, it's thought that it comes from a belief that butterflies stole butter and milk
+5
Level 38
Jan 15, 2022
lovely quiz, tho i think there's an error: the space where the animals should appear is under the name of "country", i believe that should be "animal"
+3
Level ∞
Jan 15, 2022
Stupid copy/paste! Fixed.
+7
Level 77
Jan 15, 2022
Ah, didn't know who Rupert Murdoch was so I tried dachshund thinking it was going for 'doch's hound. Really fun quiz!
+1
Level 67
Mar 27, 2024
all I could think was the A-team. But could not think of an animal that would work, and had a vague recollection of an actual person named murdoch important somewhere.
+1
Level 83
Jan 15, 2022
Fun.
+1
Level 84
Jan 16, 2022
Apparently there's an animal called a "dugong".
+4
Level 79
Jan 16, 2022
Close relative of the manatee.
+2
Level 84
Jan 16, 2022
Volkwagen? Missing the "s".
+1
Level ∞
Jan 17, 2022
Fixed
+2
Level 71
Jan 19, 2022
That’s why everyone hates Vokzwagon so much, it was founded by drunken Nazis who came up with a very hard-to-spell name.
+1
Level 75
Jan 17, 2022
Named for the guy who sells them at K-Mart: caiman

And while we're here, Was seen washing its plastic shoes with bar soap: crocodile.

+3
Level 87
Jan 18, 2022
Darn! I was sure that banging a gong meant t-rex. (Post-boomers, see Wikipedia.)
+1
Level 72
Jan 19, 2022
I answered boxer for dugong. If boxers here the gong ring they go and sit in the corner.
+1
Level 66
Jan 19, 2022
City Slickers IV with Al Gore lamenting the environmental impact of cattle drives much to Curly's chagrin. Kind of a clunker, but at least it lead to the discovery of Jackals.
+4
Level 79
Jan 20, 2022
Is it just me, or does "parrot" only sound vaguely similar to rotten pears if you say the first syllable of parrot with a strong American accent?
+2
Level 82
Jan 25, 2022
That wouldn't be unusual, though, if a thing named for something else had its pronunciation change over time to the point where it no longer sounded like the thing it was named for. For example America doesn't sound exactly like Amerigo. And though the word "holiday" comes from Old English hāligdæg, the literal translation "holy day" is also still used in contemporary English but pronounced differently.
+5
Level 77
Jan 25, 2022
::eyeroll::
+1
Level 82
Jan 28, 2022
Here you go, Remster
+1
Level 77
Feb 1, 2022
::eyeroll::
+1
Level 81
Jan 25, 2022
What's a strong American accent?
+2
Level 77
Jan 30, 2022
It's whatever American accent sounds least like BBC English.
+8
Level 87
Jan 22, 2022
How about, this animal was named because it was the "greatest of all time".
+2
Level 69
Jan 22, 2022
I spent ages trying to make Sun bear work for the Murdoch one :(
+2
Level 73
Jan 25, 2022
Hah, I made the exact same mistake
+1
Level 66
Jan 25, 2022
Me three! Was quite proud of myself when I thought of it too
+4
Level 71
Jan 25, 2022
I tried "Dewgong" several times for the first question and was wondering why it wasn't working. Only when I finished the quiz and saw the correct spelling did I realize I was typing out the name of a Pokemon. *facepalm*
+1
Level 71
Jan 25, 2022
*not the first question, the one about the gong :P
+2
Level 70
Jan 25, 2022
Completely spaced on the Jack & Al clue. Only thought was Jackass.
+1
Level 67
Mar 27, 2024
After staring at it for a while, I thought I finally had it, I was typing Jackalope, but the answer was accepted before I had finished haha
+1
Level 62
Jan 25, 2022
Enjoyed this - the stoopid contrived ones are pretty funny. Would be good to see another, maybe with plants or something.
+1
Level 67
Mar 27, 2024
I read pants... yes, plants would be better!
+1
Level 66
Jan 25, 2022
This was a lot of fun - cool idea for a quiz!
+2
Level 76
Jan 25, 2022
how do you get 'rotten pears' from parrot. Is this based on a regional accent somewhere?
+3
Level 75
Jan 25, 2022
I was wondering this too - is "parrot" pronounced "pear-rot" by people?
+1
Level 81
Jan 25, 2022
I've never heard anything other than "pear-it."
+1
Level 55
Jan 28, 2022
I mean it's close enough. I say pair-aught. So it wasn't hard to figure out , just changing what letter to emphasize on.
+1
Level 76
Jul 16, 2023
Much harder as a Brit. It's PAH-rut for us, or at least it is for me.
+1
Level 67
Jan 26, 2022
I somehow misspelled dugong and missed it
+1
Level 61
Jan 26, 2022
Wow, real lateral thinking needed and it's to early in the morning for that LOL
+2
Level 67
Jan 27, 2022
damn .. in french vw beetle is called "coccinelle" (ladybug) ..
+2
Level 79
Jan 28, 2022
Some of these were a little weird and a bit of a stretch for me. I like the idea, but I feel like the execution was a bit off.
+1
Level 67
Mar 27, 2024
For bovine I thought bull, someone is full of bull, talks sht.

For the bird I thought dodo, one person does not see it but two do. do do.

And for siam siamese (cat) was obvious to me, yes cats growl. Even tried burmese (cat), because I always forget which name goes with which country.

Looking at the sentence again I see now someone might comment, but hey, "jungle" but well I've seen cats in the forest (quite some kilometers away from any town, thought there were one or two farmhouses in the area), why not in the jungle if there is civilisation nearby. And "coming from the jungle" to me suggested you are not in the jungle yourself, but at the edge of it.