Is there an adjective for "bear" in a similar sense as how "feline" and "canine" are adjectives for cat and dog?
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2Related post: Is there any difference between an ursine and an ursid? – herisson Jul 03 '17 at 17:22
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1@Mari-LouA I hope I have enough low rep, as I posted it. – loading... Jul 03 '17 at 17:41
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3Usually such words are derived from the Latin word for the animal, and often that it the formal name of the zoological genus. You can't rely on this, but it is worth trying it: find the genus name (here, Ursa) and look in a dictionary for a word beginning "urs-". – Colin Fine Jul 03 '17 at 17:55
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2For an extensive list: What's an adjective for “pertaining to donkeys”? – Nacht Jul 04 '17 at 06:27
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I thought it was just "bear". There is something like a "bear hug", and please don't tell me the word "bear" in there refers to the noun. That would be odd. – Mr Lister Jul 04 '17 at 07:38
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As @mari-lou-a said (in a now deleted comment), according to dictionary.com it is "ursine"
Ursine:
of or relating to a bear or bears.
An example usage of "ursine":
we noted that a preponderance of the evidence supports an ursine origin for the giant panda (Giant Pandas: Biology and Conservation)
Another synonym might be "bearlike". Wiktionary has one definition that says:
Like that of a bear
Rand al'Thor
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