wildcat

wildcat
I. noun (plural wildcats) Date: 14th century 1. a. an Old World cat (Felis silvestris) that resembles but is heavier in build than the domestic tabby cat and is usually held to be among the ancestors of the domestic cat b. or plural wildcat any of various small or medium-sized cats (as the lynx or ocelot) c. a feral domestic cat 2. a savage quick-tempered person 3. a. wildcat money b. a wildcat oil or gas well c. a wildcat strike II. adjective Date: 1838 1. a. (1) issued by a financially irresponsible banking establishment <
wildcat currency
>
(2) financially irresponsible or unreliable <
wildcat banks
>
b. operating, produced, or carried on outside the bounds of standard or legitimate business practices <
wildcat insurance schemes — H. H. Reichard
>
c. of, relating to, or being an oil or gas well drilled in territory not known to be productive d. initiated by a group of workers without formal union approval or in violation of a contract <
a wildcat strike
>
<
wildcat work stoppages
>
2. a. of a cartridge having a bullet of standard caliber but using an expanded case or a case designed for a bullet of greater caliber necked down for the smaller bullet b. of a firearm using wildcat cartridges III. intransitive verb (wildcatted; wildcatting) Date: circa 1903 to prospect and drill an experimental oil or gas well or sink a mine shaft in territory not known to be productive

New Collegiate Dictionary. 2001.

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  • Wildcat — (engl. Wildkatze) steht für: nicht serienmäßig hergestellte Patronen ein Waffensystem der Firma Krauss Maffei: Wildcat (Waffensystem) ein trägergestütztes Kampfflugzeug aus dem Zweiten Weltkrieg, die Grumman F4F Wildcat ein britischer… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • wildcat — [wīld′kat΄] n. pl. wildcats or wildcat 1. a) any of a large group of fierce, medium sized, undomesticated cats, including the bobcat, Canada lynx, ocelot, serval, and caracal b) a house cat that has escaped from domestication: in this sense,… …   English World dictionary

  • wildcat — A wildcat scheme is rash financially or ethically and will probably fail …   The small dictionary of idiomes

  • wildcat — [wajldkat] n. m. ÉTYM. Mil. XXe; mot angl., « chat sauvage ». ❖ ♦ Anglic. Techn. Puits d exploration foré dans une zone pétrolière non encore exploitée …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • wildcat — (n.) early 15c., from WILD (Cf. wild) (adj.) + CAT (Cf. cat). Meaning savage woman is recorded from 1570s; sense of one who forms rash projects is attested from 1812. The adj. in the financial speculative sense is first recorded 1838, Amer.Eng …   Etymology dictionary

  • wildcat — ► NOUN 1) a small Eurasian and African cat, typically grey with black markings and a bushy tail, believed to be the ancestor of the domestic cat. 2) a hot tempered or ferocious person. 3) an exploratory oil well. ► ADJECTIVE 1) (of a strike)… …   English terms dictionary

  • Wildcat — Taxobox name = WildcatMSW3 Wozencraft | pages = 536 537] status = LC trend = down status system = iucn3.1 status ref =IUCN2006|assessors=Cat Specialist Group|year=2002|id=8543|title=Felis silvestris|downloaded=5 May 2006 Database entry includes… …   Wikipedia

  • wildcat — /wuyld kat /, n., pl. wildcats, (esp. collectively) wildcat for 1 4, adj., v., wildcatted, wildcatting. n. 1. any of several North American felines of the genus Lynx. Cf. lynx. 2. a yellowish gray, black striped feline, Felis sylvestris, of… …   Universalium

  • wildcat — ▪ I. wildcat wild‧cat 1 [ˈwaɪldkæt] adjective [only before a noun] a wildcat oil well or discovery of oil is one that is in a place where no one has found oil before   [m0] ▪ II. wildcat wildcat 2 verb [intransitive] to look for oil in a place… …   Financial and business terms

  • wildcat — [[t]wa͟ɪldkæt[/t]] wildcats 1) N COUNT A wildcat is a cat which is very fierce and lives especially in mountains and forests. A giant wildcat is being hunted after 58 lambs were butchered. 2) ADJ: ADJ n A wildcat strike happens suddenly, as a… …   English dictionary

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