jmdict
2026150
Active
(id:
2100137)
<entry id="2100137" stat="A" corpus="jmdict" type="jmdict">
<ent_corp type="jmdict">jmdict</ent_corp>
<ent_seq>2026150</ent_seq>
<r_ele>
<reb>ディメトロドン</reb>
</r_ele>
<sense>
<pos>&n;</pos>
<gloss>dimetrodon</gloss>
</sense>
<info>
<audit time="2004-11-17 00:00:00" stat="A">
<upd_detl>Entry created</upd_detl>
</audit>
<audit time="2021-04-15 10:11:33" stat="A" unap="true">
<upd_name>Chase</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>The dimetrodon was before dinosaurs and more closely related to mammals than to lizards (dinosaurs). They are classified under
synapsid. Although synapsid is probably less known, it is incorrect to label them as dinosaurs.</upd_detl>
<upd_refs>https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dimetrodon#:~:text=Dimetrodon%20(%2Fda%C9%AA%CB%88m,member%20of%20the%20family%20Sphenacodontidae.
"Dimetrodon is often mistaken for a dinosaur or as a contemporary of dinosaurs in popular culture, but it became extinct some 40
million years before the first appearance of dinosaurs. Reptile-like in appearance and physiology, Dimetrodon is nevertheless
more closely related to mammals than to modern reptiles, though it is not a direct ancestor of mammals."</upd_refs>
<upd_diff>@@ -9 +9 @@
-<gloss>dimetrodon (dinosaur)</gloss>
+<gloss>dimetrodon (synapsid)</gloss></upd_diff>
</audit>
<audit time="2021-04-15 12:06:50" stat="A">
<upd_uid>jwb</upd_uid>
<upd_name>Jim Breen</upd_name>
<upd_email>...address hidden...</upd_email>
<upd_detl>Yes, not a dinosaur. Best not to try and go further - we don't label mammals, reptiles, etc.</upd_detl>
<upd_diff>@@ -9 +9 @@
-<gloss>dimetrodon (synapsid)</gloss>
+<gloss>dimetrodon</gloss></upd_diff>
</audit>
</info>
</entry>