• Mara

    Origin 1

    Borrowing from non mara, from Proto-Germanic *marǭ, cognate with Old English mare or mære.

    Full definition of mara

    Noun

    mara

    (plural maras)
    1. (folklore) A nightmare; a spectre or wraith-like creature in Germanic and particularly Scandinavian folklore; a female demon who torments people in sleep by crouching on their chests or stomachs, or by causing terrifying visions.
      • 1996, Catharina Raudvere, "Now you see her, now you don't: some notes on the conception of female shape-shifters in Scandinavian traditions", pages 41-55 in Sandra Billington & Miranda Green (editors) The Concept of the GoddessThe corpus of related texts tells us that within rural society it was not improbable for your neighbour's envy of your fine cattle to take the form of a mara.

    Origin 2

    Borrowing from sa मार.

    Noun

    mara

    (plural maras)
    1. (Buddhism) A malicious or evil spirit.
      • 2002, Sarvananda Bluestone, The World Dream Book, page 73The mara is the spirit that causes illness, accidents, and mishaps. The only protection against it is another mara who befriends a person or a group. A mara who becomes friendly is called a gunik. This transformation occurs when a mara comes to a person in a dream and states a desire to be friendly. But there are deceitful maras who pretend to be friendly, yet will betray the person who trusts them.

    Origin 3

    From New World Spanish mará.

    Noun

    mara

    (plural maras)
    1. Any caviid rodent of genus Dolichotis, common in the Patagonian steppes of Argentina.
      • 1999, Mara, entry in Michael A. Mares (editor), Encyclopedia of Deserts, page 349,Maras have a white patch of fur on the rump that they flash when running, an adaptation they share with several species of deer and antelopes.
      • 2011, Terry A. Vaughan, ‎James M. Ryan, & ‎Nicholas J. Czaplewski, Mammalogy, 5th edition, page 228,Although only Dolichotis, the Patagonian mara, is strongly cursorial, all caviids have certain features typical of cursorial mammals....
      • 2013, R. L. Honeycutt, Chapter 3: Phylogenetics of Caviomorph Rodents and Genetic Perspectives on the Evolution of Sociality and Mating Systems in the Caviidae, José Roberto Moreira, Katia Maria P.M.B. Ferraz, Emilio A. Herrera, David W. Macdonald (editors), Capybara: Biology, Use and Conservation of an Exceptional Neotropical Species, page 70,Maras (Dolichotis patagonum) are cursorial and prefer open areas with low vegetation for breeding and more barren sites for construction of communal dens (Taber and Macdonald 1992; Baldi 2007).

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