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Neanderthal
[nee-an-der-thawl, -tawl, -tahl, ney-ahn-der-tahl]
adjective
of or relating to Neanderthal man.
(often lowercase)primitive, unenlightened, or reactionary; culturally or intellectually backward.
noun
(often lowercase)
an unenlightened or ignorant person; barbarian.
a reactionary; a person with very old-fashioned ideas.
Neanderthal
/ ɪˈæԻəˌɑː /
adjective
relating to or characteristic of Neanderthal man
primitive; uncivilized
informalultraconservative; reactionary
noun
a person showing any such characteristics
Neanderthal
An extinct variety of human that lived throughout Europe and in parts of western Asia and northern Africa during the late Pleistocene Epoch, until about 30,000 years ago. Neanderthals had a stocky build and large skulls with thick eyebrow ridges and big teeth. They usually lived in caves, made flaked stone tools, and were the earliest humans known to bury their dead. Neanderthals were either a subspecies of modern humans (Homo sapiens neanderthalensis) or a separate, closely related species (Homo neanderthalensis). They coexisted with early modern humans (Cro-Magnons) for several thousand years before becoming extinct, but are not generally believed to have interbred with them.
See also Mousterian
Neanderthal
The ancient and now extinct relatives of modern humans. Neanderthals lived in Europe about 150,000 years ago and were the earliest form of the human species, Homo sapiens.
Other 51Թ Forms
- Neanderthaler noun
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of Neanderthal1
Example Sentences
Scientists in Spain say they have discovered the oldest full human fingerprint after unearthing a rock which they say resembles a human face and suggests Neanderthals could make art.
They weren't quite living out a Neanderthal re-enactment fantasy - they had actually bought a potential tourist honeypot in the Yorkshire Dales.
"Perhaps getting Neanderthal DNA was part of the success because it gave us better adaptive capabilities outside of Africa," said Prof Stringer.
Modern humans, Neanderthals, and other recent relatives on our human family tree evolved bigger brains much more rapidly than earlier species, a new study of human brain evolution has found.
Although researchers have found evidence Neanderthals built fires for cooking and manipulating materials, exactly how they procured and processed tar has been a mystery.
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