Definitions

from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.

  • noun omnivorous mammal of Central America and South America

Etymologies

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Examples

  • A coati-mundi is a tropical, arboreal raccoon of sorts, with a long, ever-wriggling snout, sharp teeth, eyes that twinkle with humor, and clawed paws which are more skilful than many a fingered hand.

    Edge of the Jungle William Beebe 1919

  • The natural histories call him coati-mundi, while the Indian has by far the best of it, with the ringing, climactic syllables, _Kibihée!

    Edge of the Jungle William Beebe 1919

  • A young coati-mundi cannot sit man-fashion like a bear-cub, nor is he as fuzzy as a kitten or as helpless as a puppy, but he has ways of winning to the human heart, past all obstacles.

    Edge of the Jungle William Beebe 1919

  • The loudest chatter came from the guests and resident pets Conchita, a capuchin monkey, and Mundi, a baby coati-mundi.

    canada.com Top Stories 2009

  • And so it is not of the tropical mammal coati-mundi, nor even of the humorous Kib that I think, but of the soul of him galloping up and down his slanting log, of his little inner ego, which changed from a wild thing to one who would hurl himself from any height or distance into a lap, confident that we would save his neck, welcome him, and waste good time playing the game which he invented, of seeing whether we could touch his little cold snout before he hid it beneath his curved arms.

    Edge of the Jungle William Beebe 1919

Comments

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  • "Her name was Miss Buff-Towers and she was related in some way to an earl, a fact she was very proud of and never forgot. She had long front teeth, the color of old piano keys, and a huge coiled arrangement of braided hair on top of her head like an orderly eagle's nest. She was a kindhearted creature but she knew as much about raising children as I know about raising coati-mundis. (I'm not even sure what they are."

    The Saturdays by Elizabeth Enright, pp 35-36 of the 2008 paperback edition

    July 2, 2011