From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishcarnivorecar‧ni‧vore /ˈkɑːnəvɔː $ ˈkɑːrnəvɔːr/ noun [countable] 1 HBAan animal that eats flesh → herbivore, omnivore2 EAT humorous someone who eats meat → vegetarian —carnivorous /kɑːˈnɪvərəs $ kɑːr-/ adjective
Examples from the Corpus
carnivore• Their actual digestive system is that of a carnivore and so bamboo is an unlikely foodstuff to choose.• A first distinction is between herbivores and carnivores.• With certain carnivores, only the dominant male copulates with the females.• This huge flightless bird has regularly appeared in illustrated fossil books as a giant carnivore.• Stillman was a strict carnivore, allowing his patients to eat only lean meat, poultry, eggs, and low-fat cheeses.• For the carnivore, however, the football menu is more than adequate to quell your hunger.• It was like the scent of the carnivore in a zoo.• Their stooping posture was of a person melting down, slumping into the stance of a vicious carnivore.Origin carnivore (1800-1900) Latin carnivorus “flesh-eating”, from caro ( → CARNAL) + -vorus “eating”