Pygmy

[pig-mee] /ˈpɪg mi/
noun, plural Pygmies.
1.
Anthropology.
  1. a member of a small-statured people native to equatorial Africa.
  2. a Negrito of southeastern Asia, or of the Andaman or Philippine islands.
2.
(lowercase) a small or dwarfish person.
3.
(lowercase) anything very small of its kind.
4.
(lowercase) a person who is of small importance, or who has some quality, attribute, etc., in very small measure.
5.
Classical Mythology. (in the Iliad) one of a race of dwarfs who fought battles with cranes, who preyed on them and destroyed their fields.
adjective
6.
(often lowercase) of or pertaining to the Pygmies.
7.
(lowercase) of very small size, capacity, power, etc.
Also, Pigmy.
Origin
1350-1400; Middle English pigmēis, plural of pigmē < Latin Pygmaeus < Greek pygmaîos dwarfish (adj.), Pygmy (noun), equivalent to pygm() distance from elbow to knuckles + -aios adj. suffix
Related forms
pygmoid, adjective
pygmyish, adjective
pygmyism, noun
Synonyms
2. See dwarf.
Examples from the web for pygmies
  • But while sharing a global distribution, the pygmies prefer warmer climes of tropical and subtropical waters.
  • Others contended that the creatures, if indeed it was a hominid, was related to pygmies.
  • pygmies were the earliest known inhabitants of the country.
  • pygmies are the earliest known inhabitants of the country.
British Dictionary definitions for pygmies

pygmy

/ˈpɪɡmɪ/
noun (pl) -mies
1.
an abnormally undersized person
2.
something that is a very small example of its type
3.
a person of little importance or significance
4.
(modifier) of very small stature or size
Derived Forms
pygmaean, pygmean (pɪɡˈmiːən) adjective
Word Origin
C14 pigmeis the Pygmies, from Latin Pygmaeus a Pygmy, from Greek pugmaios undersized, from pugmē fist

Pygmy

/ˈpɪɡmɪ/
noun (pl) -mies
1.
a member of one of the dwarf peoples of Equatorial Africa, noted for their hunting and forest culture
Word Origin and History for pygmies

pygmy

n.

late 14c., Pigmei, "member of a fabulous race of dwarfs," described by Homer and Herodotus and said to inhabit Egypt or Ethiopia and India, from Latin Pygmaei (singular Pygmaeus), from Greek Pygmaioi, plural of Pygmaios "a Pygmy," noun use of adjective meaning "dwarfish," literally "of the length of a pygme; a pygme tall," from pygme "cubit," literally "fist," the measure of length from the elbow to the knuckle; related to pyx "with clenched fist" and to Latin pugnus "fist" (see pugnacious).

Figurative use for "person of small importance" is from 1590s. Believed in 17c. to refer to chimpanzees or orangutans, and occasionally the word was used in this sense. The ancient word was applied by Europeans to the equatorial African race 1863, but the tribes probably were known to the ancients and likely were the original inspiration for the legend. As an adjective from 1590s. Related: Pygmean; Pygmaean.

pygmies in Medicine

pygmy pyg·my (pĭg'mē)
n.

  1. An individual of unusually small size.

  2. Pygmy A member of any of various peoples, especially found in equatorial Africa and parts of southeast Asia, having an average height less than 5 feet.

adj.
Unusually or atypically small.
pygmies in Culture

Pygmy definition


A member of any ethnic group in which the average height of the adult male is less than four feet, eleven inches. There are Pygmy tribes in dense rain-forest areas of central Africa, southern India, Malaysia, and the Philippines. The most widely studied Pygmies are the Mbuti of northeastern Democratic Republic of Congo, who pursue a nomadic hunting and gathering subsistence (see nomadism and hunting and gathering societies), but have established complex interdependent relationships with their non-Pygmy farming neighbors.