Advertisement

Advertisement

View definitions for wild boar

wild boar

noun as in swine

Strongest matches

Strong matches

Weak match

Discover More

Example Sentences

Substituting wild boar and nutria for beef lowers greenhouse gases, he says, while eating weeds reduces the need for the 5 billion pounds of harmful pesticides and herbicides used globally each year.

Shakira has accused a “gang” of wild boars of stealing her handbag and her phone while she was casually strolling through a Barcelona park.

A wild boar trotted through Barcelona, coyotes padded around San Francisco, and deer were spotted in London.

For the first time, technology can deliver snapshots of every individual broccoli crown on a 1,000-acre parcel and show which fields are most likely to see incursions from the deer and wild boars that live in the hills above the Salinas Valley.

Why was William shooting wild boar the day before a new conservation push was unveiled?

There is a giant taxidermic wild boar head hanging proudly over a live-wood fireplace.

I order a plate of hunter-style wild boar with dumplings and cranberries and take a look around.

Gathering up his strength, he rushed into it, at the risk of being crushed, like a wild boar cutting through the pack of hounds.

Didn't you complain to my son last night of a wild boar that had been ravaging your garden?

Those who remained were terrified into obedience, and the Wild Boar's son was declared Bishop.

Wild animals were also bred for food in similar preserves, the hare and the wild boar being the favorites.

Therefore we may presume that this wild boar of Cape Verd is a simple variety, a particular race in the wild boar species.

Advertisement

Synonym of the Day

Which one is a synonym for laidback?Get the answer

Start each day with the Synonym of the Day in your inbox!

By clicking "Sign Up", you are accepting Dictionary.com Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policies.

On this page you'll find 7 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to wild boar, such as: hog, pig, boar, peccary, porker, and oinker.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement