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PIGS
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- "Swine" redirects here. For the river, see Świna.
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"Sus" redirects here. For the acronym, see SUS.
Pigs are ungulates native to Eurasia collectively grouped under the genus Sus within the Suidae family. They have been domesticated and raised as livestock by some peoples for meat (called pork) as well as for leather. Their bristly hairs are also traditionally used for brushes. Wild pigs continue to fill these functions in certain parts of the world.
Pigs are omnivores, which means that they consume both plants and animals. On a small farm, or in a large household, they can be fed kitchen scraps as part or all of their diet. In the wild, they are foraging animals. Pigs that are allowed to forage may be watched by swineherds. Because of their foraging abilities and excellent sense of smell, they are used to find truffles in many European countries. They are also fattened to be eaten as ham and other types of meat, such as bacon.
Pigs are very smart, therefore, they are highly trainable animals, and some, such as the Asian pot-bellied pig, are kept as pets. A litter of piglets typically contains between 6 and 12 animals. Occasionally, in captivity, pigs may eat their own young.
Pigs do not have effective sweat glands [1], so pigs cool themselves using water or mud during hot weather. They also use mud as a form of sunscreen to protect their skin from sunburn. Mud also provides protection against flies and parasites.
Pig species
Hybrid swine
Domestic Tamworth pigs are often crossed with wild boar to create "Iron Age Pigs" that resemble early domestic pigs. The piglets have stripes or blotches like young boar. "Iron Age Pigs" are a common attraction at farm parks. The hybrids are tamer than wild boar, but less tractable than domestic swine and generally become specialist pork sausages. Other domestic breeds of pig have been crossed with wild boar to produce a leaner meat for the specialist meat trade.
Various domestic pigs have been crossed with American wild hogs to produce compact, hairy hog-like hybrids.
In "The Variation Of Animals And Plants Under Domestication" Charles Darwin wrote: The European wild boar and the Chinese domesticated pig are almost certainly specifically distinct: Sir F. Darwin crossed a sow of the latter breed with a wild Alpine boar which had become extremely tame, but the young, though having half-domesticated blood in their veins, were "extremely wild in confinement", and would not eat swill like common English pigs.
Linguistics
Etymology
Modern English "pig" probably derives from Old English "*picg", which was found within compound words, the ultimate origin is unknown but Dutch "big" (meaning "young pig") seems to be a cognate. Originally "pig referred to young pigs only as the word for adults was swine. Another Old English word for "pig" was "fearh", related to "furrow" from the Proto-Indo-European stem "*perk" meaning "dig, furrow" (compare Latin "porcus" meaning "pig") . This reflects a widespread Indo-European tendency to name animals from typical attributes or activities.
Terminology
Several different words in English identify different types of pigs:
- Boar - An adult male pig
- Sow - An adult female pig
- Piglet/farrow - A juvenile pig
- Shoat - A young pig between 100 to 180 lb (50 to 90 kg)
- Gilt - An immature female pig
- Barrow - A castrated male pig
- Hog - a domestic or wild adult swine, especially one raised for slaughter because they fatten quickly; in its original sense it means a castrated boar.
- Swine - Synonym for "pigs" (plural)
Other pig-related words
- The noise that a pig makes is usually represented as "oink" in the English language but in many different ways in other languages – for instance, chrum (Polish), hunk (Albanian), hulu (Mandarin Chinese), nøff (Norwegian) and so on. See oink for a fuller list.
Cartoon pig
- Early footballs were originally made from animal bladders, often from pigs. This was the origin of the term pigskins.
- The familiar piggybank got its name and shape as a result of a pun on the word pygg, a type of clay commonly used to produce household items in the 18th Century.
- Pig iron is so named because the molten newly-smelted iron was once poured into molds resembling rows of suckling pigs.
- A type of barrel called a "hog's head" appears often in the writings of Mark Twain.
- A "hogshead" is a large volume of liquid. The term is also a colloquial reference to the gearbox for the "drive" wheels of automobiles,especially for large transport trucks,particularly those used in the Pulpwood industry of the Southeastern United States.
Cultural references to pigs
Religious references
- In ancient Greece, a sow was an appropriate sacrifice to Demeter and had been her favorite animal since she had been the Great Goddess of archaic times. Initiates at the Eleusinian Mysteries began by sacrificing a pig.
- The pig is one of the 12-year cycle of animals which appear in the Chinese zodiac related to the Chinese calendar. Believers in Chinese astrology associate each animal with certain personality traits. See: Pig (Zodiac).
- In the Gospels, Jesus tells a parable of a prodigal son who gets a job feeding pigs and wished that he could eat the swill himself.
- In the Gospels, Jesus performs a miracle by causing demons who possess a man to enter a herd of swine who then run off a cliff and drown. The demons identify themselves collectively as "Legion" and to ancient readers, particularly those who were familiar with Hebrew culture, would find it humorous and fitting that the "unclean spirits" (demons) were made to enter the "unclean flesh" of the swines.
- Both the Islamic dietary law (Halal) and Jewish dietary law (Kashrut or Kosher) forbid the eating of pork in any form, considering the pig to be an unclean animal (see taboo food and drink).
Pigs and people
- Pigs are often used to comment on the human condition. Winston Churchill said that "Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals."
- A number of schools (elementary, middle, and high schools) and universities have adopted pig or pig-related mascots. The most notable is the University of Arkansas Razorbacks, whose mascot, the razorback (Sus scrofa) makes them the only university or major sports team in the United States with a porcine mascot.
- In European folklore, there is a widespread belief that pigs are intensely frightened by mirrors.
- Magical transformation of humans into pigs has been used as a key plot device in fantasy storytelling - for example the Ancient Greek epic The Odyssey, in which the hero's ship's crew is turned into pigs by Circe.
- Zhu Bajie is a famous part human, part pig, literary character from the Chinese novel Journey to the West.
- Harley Davidson motorcycles are sometimes referred to as "hogs".
Pig-related idioms
- The idiomatic phrase "when pigs fly" (or 'pigs might fly') refers to something that is unlikely to ever happen. Though its origins are much older, its popularity is reinforced by such popular references as in the Lewis Carroll poem The Walrus and the Carpenter and Pink Floyd's album Animals
- The English language abounds with unflattering references and idioms involving pigs. Pigs are commonly associated with greed ("as greedy as a pig") and obesity, gluttony ("to pig out"). Likewise, a hog is someone or something that monopolizes time, resources, or processes, e.g. a road hog or server hog. Pigs are also associated with dirtiness ("this room is a pigsty"); the latter probably comes from their habit of wallowing in mud. The perennially soot-covered character in the Peanuts comic strip is named Pig-Pen.
- "In a pig's eye" is a rhyming slang expression meaning, "That's not true." "Pig's eye" rhymes with "lie." There are also variants to this saying such as, "In a pig's ass."
- "Sweating like a Pig" to indicate sweating heavily. This is incorrect, as pigs don't have very effective sweat glands.
- "Pig out" is an idiom that means to eat voraciously.
- The Missouri folklorist Max Hunter collected a number of pig-related idioms:
- "It's plain as a pig on a sofa"
- "Clumsy as a hog on ice"
- "Content as a dead pig in the sunshine"
- "Wild as a peach-orchard hog"
- Thrifty (if not fussy) sausage-makers were said to use "everything but the squeal."
- The term "slicker than a greased pig" refers an event that went well without any set backs.
- The phrase "pig's ear" means a useless object. To make a (total) pig's ear of something means to (totally) mess it up.
Music and art
- Pigs Is Pigs, is the title of a 1937 Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoon. This noted cartoon tells a story rooted in the synonymy of pigs with gluttony.
- Pigs feature heavily in the artwork and stage shows of the rock band Pink Floyd.
- Pink Floyd's 1977 album Animals featured three songs about pigs, in symbolic, Orwell referencing, form. See the article for a wider analysis.
- The fictional character Wizpig is the main villan in Diddy Kong Racing.
See also
External links
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