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goat

  (gōt) pronunciation
n.
  1. Any of various hollow-horned, bearded ruminant mammals of the genus Capra, originally of mountainous areas of the Old World, especially any of the domesticated forms of C. hircus, raised for wool, milk, and meat.
  2. A lecherous man.
  3. A scapegoat.
  4. Goat See Capricorn.

[Middle English got, from Old English gāt.]

goatish goat'ish adj.
 
 

Though goat meat has been enjoyed in southern Europe, Latin America and many Mediterranean countries for centuries, it has never really caught on in the United States. The meat of mature goats is extremely tough and strong-flavored. Most goat meat consumed comes from a kid, a baby goat that is usually not more than 6 months old. Kid meat is as tender and delicate as that of young lamb, and it can be prepared in any manner suitable for lamb. It can sometimes be found in specialty meat markets. Goats also provide milk, which is usually made into goat cheese, better known as chèvre. Fresh goat's milk can sometimes be purchased in natural food stores; canned goat's milk is carried in many supermarkets.

 
Thesaurus: goat

noun

    One who is made an object of blame: scapegoat, whipping boy. Slang fall guy, patsy. See praise/blame.

 

Any hollow-horned ruminant in the bovid genus Capra. Goats have a lighter build and straighter hair than sheep; their horns arch backward; and the tail is short. Males usually have a beard. Wild goats include the ibex and markhor. Domesticated goats are descended from the pasang, which is probably native to Asia. In China, Great Britain, Europe, and North America, the domestic goat is primarily a milk producer; much of the milk is used to make cheese. Some breeds, notably the Angora and cashmere, are raised for their wool; young goats are the source of kid leather.

For more information on goat, visit Britannica.com.

 

It was a long-standing custom, which lasted well into the 20th century and may even still be carried out, for farmers to keep a goat with their cattle. It is usually stated that the presence of the goat helps prevent abortion in cattle and generally acts as a calming influence. Some say that the goat eats certain plants which are harmful to cows and thus protects them, while at least one Durham farmer maintained that goats kill and eat adders. The correspondent to Notes & Queries who reported the latter was sceptical until he saw it happen with his own eyes. Several sources state that it is the smell of the goat which is beneficial. Virtually all the examples of this practice which can be geographically located come from the Midlands or north of the country, with Gloucestershire being the most southerly example. This may be an accident of documentation, or may reflect the true distribution. Its age is also open to question, as Opie and Tatem give the first known reference as c.1840, but it is likely to be much older than that. There is surprisingly little other English lore concerning goats. Hazlitt reported a belief that ‘they are never to be seen for twenty-four hours together, and that once in that space they pay a visit to the devil in order to have their beards combed’ which he claimed was common in England and Scotland. Another tradition is that diamonds will be softened by no other substance than goat's blood, and Lean quotes three 16th and 17th century literary references to this idea.

Bibliography
The full bibliography list is available here.

  • Opie and Tatem, 1989: 174
  • N&Q 3s:9 (1866), 118, 330
  • 11s:11 (1915), 452, 500-1
  • 12s:1 (1916), 16
  • 12s:3 (1917), 310
  • Lean, 1903: ii. 605-6
  • Hazlitt, 1905: 278
 

[Sp]

A hardy short-haired mammal with horns and in the male a beard (Capra). The bezoar of the mountains of southwest Asia (Capra hircus aegagrus) was the wild ancestor of the domestic goat, early examples of which have been found dating from the 8th millennium bc in the Near East. See also sheep.

 

[Old English gāt]

This horned, bearded, clovenhoofed mammal (genus Capra) appears often in Celtic traditions, usually representing fertility or, later, sexuality and sexual aggression. Ancient deities with goat-horns are found in Gaul and Britain. Gaulish Mercury appears with a goat at the shrine of Glanum in Provence. Cernunnus, the antlered god, is pictured both with goat legs and riding on a goat. A small bronze image of a goat with huge horns was found in south-west Scotland in the 1970s. Many frightening creatures in folklore are wholly or partially goat: the Irish bocanách; the Manx goayr heddagh; Scottish glaistig (half-woman) and ùruisg (half-man). The monstrous goathead people [Gaborchend Goborchind, etc.] in Irish folklore possibly derive from the Fomorians. On the other hand, the more benign Irish pooka (or púca) takes its name from the word for hegoat, poc. The Welsh hero Lleu Llaw Gyffes could be made vulnerable only when his feet were touching a billygoat. A goat was once enthroned in a mock ceremony at Mullinavat, Co. Kilkenny, while a similar ceremony, the three-day long Puck Fair, a modern survival of the Lughnasa feast, still draws thousands to Killorglin, Co. Kerry, each August. Numerous place-names incorporate goat references, e.g. Ardgour [Scottish Gaelic aird ghobhair, goat heights], south-west of Fort William, Inverness-shire, and Gavrinis [Breton, goat island], the great Breton archaeological site. Old Irish gabor; Modern Irish gabhar; Scottish Gaelic gobhar; Manx goayr; Welsh gafr; Cornish gavar; Breton gavr.

 
ruminant mammal with hollow horns and coarse hair belonging to the genus Capra of the cattle family and closely related to the sheep. True wild goats, all of Old World origin, include the Persian bezoar goat, or pasan, possibly the ancestor of the domestic varieties; the several species of ibex (including the tur), and the markhor of Asia, with spirally twisted horns. The Rocky Mountain goat and the chamois are not true goats but are closely related. Goats are hardy cliff dwellers, preferring an arid climate. They live in herds and feed on grass, weeds, shrubs, and other vegetation. Goats were early domesticated; they are pictured in ancient Egyptian art and mentioned in the Bible. Domestic goats, varieties of Capra hircus, are found throughout the world, most abundantly in Asia. They are raised for milk, flesh, hair and wool, skins, and, in certain areas, to control scrub growth. Goat's milk is easily digested and has greater protein and fat content than that of cows. The chief dairy breeds in the United States are the Toggenburg and Saanen (both of Swiss origin), as well as the Nubian, French Alpine, and Rock Alpine goats. Many dairy goats are hornless. The Cashmere goat is raised in central Asia, N India, and Iran for the wool of its downy undercoat. Angora goats, whose clipped wool is known as mohair, are more numerous than other breeds in the United States; they are raised chiefly in Texas. The Spanish, or common, goat, familiar in the Southwest, was brought to Mexico by early Spanish settlers. Goats are classified in the phylum Chordata, subphylum Vertebrata, class Mammalia, order Artiodactyla, family Bovidae.

Bibliography

See D. Mackenzie, Goat Husbandry (3d ed. 1970).


 

Goats are one of the earliest domesticated animals, providing humankind with milk, meat, hides, and fiber. They include several species of small, cloven-hoofed ruminants constituting the genus Capra. Similar to other ruminants, including cows and sheep, goats process plant roughage through a fermentation process within their compartmentalized stomachs, and they chew regurgitated, partially digested food known as cud. Unlike other ruminants, goats are agile browsers, preferring to reach upwards for foods such as the leaves, fruit, and bark of small trees rather than grazing on grasses. When the desired foods are unavailable, however, goats will consume any plant material accessible. It is this foraging ability and flexibility of diet that has secured the importance of goats as a food source in the world's subsistence economies.

Domestication

Wild ancestors of modern goats, known as Persian or Bezoar goats (Capra aegagrus) once roamed from South Asia to Crete. It is believed human goatherding began 10,000 years ago in the Zagros highlands of western Iran, as evidenced through selective slaughter of young males. DNA studies support that domestication began at that time due to the rapid growth of the goat population. Domesticated goats (Capra hircus) demonstrate remarkable genetic uniformity worldwide. Genetic analysis suggests that goats were a commonly traded in ancient times, which dispersed the population to Europe, Africa, and Asia. Later, they provided a convenient source of milk and meat aboard the ships of European explorers, who introduced goats to the New World.

Breeds

Selective breeding of goats has resulted in animals smaller than their ancestors, and with greater diversity of coat length, texture, and color. Noses are straight or convex; ears vary from negligible external organs to pendulous and droopy. Both males (bucks) and females (does) are horned. Hornless (polled) animals have been bred, though the recessive polled trait is associated with infertility. (Goat horns are frequently removed after they bud to prevent accidents.) One characteristic that has not changed with domestication is goat intelligence, judged superior to that of dogs. Numerous breeds have been developed for meat, milk, and fiber (including angora for mohair, and cashmere), in addition to being bred for hardiness and suitability to specific geographic regions.

Distribution

The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimates that in 2001 close to 693 million goats were kept worldwide, with 95 percent of all stock found in developing countries. This compares to 1.3 billion cattle and 1 billion sheep. Regionally, South Asia has the most goats, with 205 million head, followed by East and Southeast Asia, due largely to the 157 million in China. Other nations with significant goat populations (in descending order) are India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Iran, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Burkina Faso, Brazil, Indonesia, Kenya, Mali, Mexico, Mongolia, and Somalia.

Official statistics on goat meat and milk greatly underestimate production since many goats are raised for personal family use. Primarily nations with large numbers of animals accounted for the most meat: over one-third of the global supply in 2001 came from China. Other significant producers include India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nigeria, Sudan, and Iran. Commercial milk production did not correlate so closely with number of head, however, reflecting cultural differences in dairy food use. In 2001, major producers were India, Bangladesh, and Sudan, followed by Pakistan, Somalia, Spain, Russia, France, and Greece.

Goat Products

Meat. Goat meat has a taste similar to mutton, with a slightly gamy flavor. It is lower in fat than either beef or mutton (due to a fat layer exterior to the muscle rather than marbled through it), and can be drier. The United States Department of Agriculture describes quality goat meat as firm and finely grained. The color can vary between females and males, from light pink to bright red. Kids, defined as under one year old, are often slaughtered at three to five months of age. Their meat is less flavorful and juicy, but more tender than the meat of older goats.

Goat meat is an important protein source in South Asia, the Middle East, and Africa. It is consumed regularly in some parts of Latin America, such as the Caribbean, Mexico, and Brazil, and is regionally popular in China, Korea, Indonesia, the Philippines, Greece, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. The entire goat is usually consumed. An eviscerated carcass is typically cut, flesh and bone, into cubes for stewing, used in dishes such as curried goat and garlic-flavored caldereta, a Spanish specialty found also in Latin America and the Philippines. Roasted goat is popular worldwide, often considered a special-occasion food. In Saudi Arabia, the cavity is stuffed with rice, fruits, and nuts. Jerked goat leg, heavily seasoned before cooking over allspice wood, is a Jamaican specialty.

Organ meats are eaten, too. Goat's head soup is prepared in most regions where the meat is consumed. The dish is known as isiewu in Nigeria; the eyes are considered a delicacy. In Morocco, kidneys, liver, heart, lung, and pancreas are added to the meat to make goat tagine. In Kyrgyzstan, the testicles are roasted separately over the fire for consumption by men, and washed down with vodka. In the Philippines, paklay is an Ilocano specialty that combines goat intestines with sour fruits, such as unripe pineapple.

There are few taboos regarding goat meat, and it is accepted by all major religions that permit eating meat. Jewish consumption is often dependent on kosher processing, and for Muslims it must be slaughtered according to halal rules. In some regions goats, especially kids, are associated with certain religious holidays, particularly Passover, Easter, and Ramadan. Goat meat is usually classified as a hot or yang food in the Chinese philosophical system of yin/yang, and preferentially consumed during the winter months.

Goat meat is not well-accepted by a majority of Americans due to negative associations with garbageeating and the unpleasant odor of the buck during rut. Exceptions are found among ethnic populations and in the Southwest, where Spanish-Mexican influences have popularized barbequed or pit-roasted cabrito (suckling kid). Enterprising goat ranchers in the United States market goat jerky and sausages as cabrito, or as the more French-sounding chevon.

Dairy Foods. Goat's milk is traditionally consumed fresh, fermented as yogurt, and processed into butter and cheese. While goat's milk is a significant protein food in areas where grazing land is limited, goats lactate seasonally and produce lower quantities of milk than do cows, reducing availability. Fresh milk is a common beverage in South Asia, parts of the Middle East, and Greece and is an occasional dietary addition in other goat-raising nations (with the exception of China and Korea). In Europe, evaporated, canned, and powdered goat's milk products are popular. Cow's milk desserts are occasionally made from goat's milk as well, such as ice cream or the Latin American caramelized milk sweet known as dulce de leche or cajeta.

Goat's milk cheeses are favored in the Middle East, and in parts of Europe and Latin America. They are processed and classified similarly to cheeses prepared from other milks. Soft and semisoft unripened (unaged) cheeses predominate, often home-made. Most are delicate, spreadable, snowy white in color, with a light, tart flavor. Many are marketed under the generic term Chèvre (French for goat's cheese) and may be named for their shape, such as buttons or pyramids. Fewer firm and ripened (aged) goat's cheeses are produced; examples are Crottin and Sancerre. Some cheeses traditionally made with goat's, cow's, or sheep's milk blends include Feta, Fromage Frais, Gjetost, Kaseri, and Queso Fresco.

Health Value

Meat. Goat meat is nutritionally notable for combining the advantages of red meat with those of white meat or poultry. Goat meat provides similar amounts of protein when compared to the composite nutritional value for beef, but is 80 percent lower in total fat, most of which is unsaturated. Goat meat is also lower in fat than pork, lamb, and skinless chicken breasts. Iron content in goat meat is 70 percent higher than in beef and 200 percent higher than chicken. Cholesterol levels are similar to beef, pork, and lamb, however.

Milk. Goat's milk is a vitamin-and mineral-rich protein food (see Table 1), shown to be a suitable substitute for cow's milk in feeding malnourished children. Yet, it is the differences in the fat, protein, and carbohydrate composition of goat's milk that account for its reputation as a healthy food. The fat contains a high proportion of small-and medium-chain fatty acids, which increases absorbability and contributes to the tangy flavor. It is lower in casein proteins than is cow's milk, resulting in much smaller curd (protein clump) formation in the stomach, another factor in digestibility. Goat's milk is naturally homogenized because it also lacks the protein agglutinin, so the fat stays dispersed in the milk and does not form cream at the top. Lactose, a sugar found in all milks, is slightly lower in goat's than in cow's milk, so individuals with lactose intolerance (the inability to digest lactose, resulting in intestinal discomfort) may tolerate goat's milk better.

Goat's milk is often touted as an alternative for individuals with allergies to cow's milk. Goat's milk may be better tolerated, yet it can cause adverse reactions in individuals who are extremely sensitive to caseins or other proteins, such as lactoglobulins. Conversely, individuals who tolerate cow's milk may show sensitivity to goat's milk. Some parents of infants and toddlers prefer goat's milk to cow's milk or formula due to its superior digestibility, but nutritional adequacy is dependent on fortification, particularly folate. Use of unpasteurized (raw) goat's milk or dairy foods has serious health risks, including brucellosis, listeriosis, staphylococcus infection, salmonella poisoning, and toxoplasmosis.

The Land of Milk and Honey

The Talmud explains that the biblical description of a land "flowing with milk and honey" actually refers to goats foraging in fig trees. The figs were so ripe that sweet juice (called fruit honey) dripped everywhere, and the goats were so well-nourished their udders overflowed with milk. The milk and honey literally spilled across the land.

Ketubot 111b, Megilla 6a and Ramban,

Shmot 3:8.

*

The Old French word for slaughtering and cutting up meat is boucheron, from the term for a he-goat, bouc. It is also the root of the English words "butcher," "buck" (a male goat), and, perhaps, the slang term "butch."

Goats metabolize and process the yellow-and orange-colored carotenes found in plants much more efficiently than do cows, which is the reason the milk is white, not cream-colored, and the fat is colorless (a drawback for butter).

*

Xanadu cheese, which blends a mixture of cow's and goat's cheeses, was popular in the American South during the nineteenth century. It was a staple food for the Union Army while in the South, and was so disliked it was banned from consumption after the South was defeated.

Bibliography

Addrizzo, John R. "Use of Goat Milk and Goat Meat as Therapeutic Aids in Cardiovascular Diseases." In Meat Goat Production and Marketing Handbook, edited by Frank Pinkerton and B. W. Pinkerton. Raleigh, N.C.: Rural Economic Development Center, 1994.

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. FAOSTAT: Agriculture Data. Available at http://apps.fao.org/page/collections?subset=agriculture.2001.

Harwell, Lynn, and Frank Pinkerton. "Consumer Demand for Goat Meat." In Meat Goat Production and Marketing Handbook, edited by Frank Pinkerton and B. W. Pinkerton. Raleigh, N.C.: Rural Economic Development Center, 1994.

Luikart, Gordon, et al. "Multiple Maternal Origins and Weak Phylogeographic Structure in Domestic Goats." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98 (8 May 2001): 5927.

Razafindrakoto, Odile, et al. "Goat's Milk as a Substitute for Cow's Milk in Undernourished Children: a Randomized Double-Blind Clinical Trial," Pediatrics 94 (1994): 65.

United States Department of Agriculture Food Safety and Inspection Service. Food Safety of Goat and Horse. Washington D.C., 1997.

United States Department of Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service. USDA Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, Release 14. Nutrient Data Laboratory Home Page, Available at http://www.nal.usda.gov/fnic/foodcomp.2001.

Zeder, Melinda A., and Brian Hesse. "The Initial Domestication of Goats (Capra hircus) in the Zagros Mountains 10,000 Years Ago," Science 287 (24 March 2000): 2254.

—Pamela Goyan Kittler

Selected nutr
 

The devil was frequently represented as a goat, and as such presided over the witches' Sabbat. The goat was also the "emblem of sinful men at the day of judgment."

 

A small, horned ruminant used for milk, and angora and kashmir fibers. A variety of the species Capra hircus which also includes the wild goat. Common breeds of dairy goats are anglo-nubian, british alpine, saanen, toggenburg. Common indigenous goats, e.g. boer, are usually dual or even multipurpose.

  • g. deodorizing — performed on the bucks by removing an area of skin from medially and posteriorly to the horns. The scent is contained in sebaceous cells in areas of wrinkled, folded and hairless skin. There is another lesser smell in the urine of the buck.
  • g. doe mastitis
  • g. lousedamalinia caprae, biting louse; linognathus stenopsis, sucking louse.
  • g. plague — peste des petits ruminants.
  • g. pox — see goatpox.
  • Rocky Mountain g. — is really a goat-antelope, with a shaggy white coat and black horns.
  • g. sheep hybrids — matings between the species are often fertile to the extent that an embryo is conceived but it invariably dies by about 60 days of pregnancy.
  • wild g. — there are many genera of wild goats including ibex, steinbok and the true wild goat, Capra hircus, the progenitor of the domestic goat.
 
pronunciation

IN BRIEF: n. - Any of numerous agile ruminants related to sheep but having a beard and straight horns; A victim of ridicule or pranks.

pronunciation Some people keep a goat for milk.

 
Wikipedia: Goat (disambiguation)


Goat is the domestic goat, one of nine species in the genus Capra.

Goat may also refer to:

In film:

See also


 
Translations: Translations for: Goat

Dansk (Danish)
n. - ged, buk, horebuk

Nederlands (Dutch)
geit, steenbok (sterrenbeeld), domoor, versierder, zondebok

Français (French)
n. - (Zool, Culin) chèvre, (GB) andouille, vieux cochon

idioms:

  • get someone's goat    taper sur les nerfs (de qn)

Deutsch (German)
n. - Ziege

idioms:

  • get someone's goat    jmdn. aufregen (ugs.)

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - γίδα, κατσίκα, τράγος, (μτφ.) ακόλαστος, σάτυρος

Italiano (Italian)
capra

Português (Portuguese)
n. - cabra (f) (Zool.), Capricórnio (m) (Astr.), trouxa (m) (coloq.), pessoa (f) lasciva (fig.)

Русский (Russian)
коза, козел

Español (Spanish)
n. - cabra, macho cabrío

idioms:

  • get someone's goat    sacar de quicio a alguien

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - get, bock, stenbocken (astrol.)

中文(简体) (Chinese (Simplified))
山羊, 替罪羊, 色鬼

中文(繁體) (Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 山羊, 替罪羊, 色鬼

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 염소, 여자를 좋아하는 남성

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - ヤギ, 身代わり, 犠牲, 好色な男

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) ماعز‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮תיש, עז, אדם תאוותן, אדם טיפש (מדוברת)‬


 
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Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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