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buffalo

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buf⋅fa⋅lo

[buhf-uh-loh] noun, plural -loes, -los, (especially collectively) -lo, verb, -loed, -lo⋅ing.
–noun
1. any of several large wild oxen of the family Bovidae. Compare bison, Cape buffalo, water buffalo.
2. buffalo robe.
3. a buffalofish.
4. a shuffling tap-dance step.
–verb (used with object) Informal.
5. to puzzle or baffle; confuse; mystify: He was buffaloed by the problem.
6. to impress or intimidate by a display of power, importance, etc.: The older boys buffaloed him.

Origin:
1535–45, Americanism; earlier bufalo < Pg (now bufaro) < LL būfalus, var. of L būbalus bubal
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Buf⋅fa⋅lo

[buhf-uh-loh]
–noun
a port in W New York, on Lake Erie. 357,870.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2010.
Cite This Source Link To buffalo
buf·fa·lo   (bŭf'ə-lō')   
n.   pl. buffalo or buf·fa·loes or buf·fa·los
    1. Any of several oxlike Old World mammals of the family Bovidae, such as the water buffalo and African buffalo.

    2. The North American bison, Bison bison.

  1. The buffalo fish.

tr.v.   buf·fa·loed, buf·fa·lo·ing, buf·fa·loes
  1. To intimidate, as by a display of confidence or authority: "The board couldn't buffalo the federal courts as it had the Comptroller" (American Banker).

  2. To deceive; hoodwink: "Too often . . . job seekers have buffaloed lenders as to their competency and training" (H. Jane Lehman).

  3. To confuse; bewilder.


[Italian bufalo or Portuguese or Spanish búfalo, from Late Latin būfalus, from Latin būbalus, antelope, buffalo, from Greek boubalos, perhaps from bous, cow; see gwou- in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: The buffalo is so closely associated with the Wild West that one might assume that its name comes from a Native American word, as is the case with the words moose and skunk. In fact, however, buffalo can probably be traced back by way of one or more of the Romance languages through Late and Classical Latin and ultimately to the Greek word boubalos, meaning "an antelope or a buffalo." The buffalo referred to by the Greek and Latin words was of course not the American one but an Old World mammal, such as the water buffalo of southern Asia. Applied to the North American mammal, buffalo is a misnomer, bison being the preferred term. As far as everyday usage is concerned, however, buffalo, first recorded for the American mammal in 1635, is older than bison, first recorded in 1774.
Buf·fa·lo   (bŭf'ə-lō')   
A city of western New York at the eastern end of Lake Erie on the Canadian border. It is a major Great Lakes port of entry and an important manufacturing and milling center. Population: 276,000.
Buf'fa·lo'ni·an adj. & n.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Cultural Dictionary

Buffalo

City in western New York, on Lake Erie and the Niagara River.

Note: Niagara Falls is northwest of Buffalo.
The American Heritage® New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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Word Origin & History

buffalo 
1588, from Port. bufalo "water buffalo," from L. bufalus, var. of bubalus "wild ox," from Gk. boubalos "buffalo," originally a kind of African antelope, later used of a type of domesticated ox in southern Asia and the Mediterranean lands, from bous "ox, cow." Wrongly applied since c.1635 to the American bison. The verb meaning "to overawe" is from 1903. Buffalo wings finger food so called because the recipe was invented in Buffalo, N.Y., (1964, at Frank & Teressa's Anchor Bar on Main Street).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2001 Douglas Harper
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